Campfire culture and computer culture: Museums of the present


Autoria(s): Lawe Davies, Chris; Connelly, Brian; Obijiofor, Levi
Contribuinte(s)

G. Tremblay

Data(s)

01/01/2003

Resumo

In Australia indigenous peoples have never had a treaty with the dominant cultures; and their on-going marginalisation is some testimony to this. However, they have not languished entirely in a policy free environment: media is one area where some policy advances have been made; but media policy development has experienced a number of problems. It has tended to be monolithic in a situation demanding multi and complex treatments. And funding, as always, never seems sufficient to meet those multi and complex needs. This paper examines a small remote community on the island of Milingimbi off the northern coast of Arnhem Land in Australia's far north. People in East Arnhem Land refer to themselves collectively as Yolngu. This community is not typical of many documented cases of media relations between indigenous and non-indigenous peoples; however, the fact that it tends to overturn much of the conventional scholarship surrounding indigenous peoples and the media, helps shed new light on the inadequacy of not only monolithic media policy, but the inadequacy of media-only approaches to policy. Arguably, the significance of the media in Milingimbi is part of a 'triangulated' relationship between indigenous and dominant cultures. That triangulation also involves appropriate forms of government and education, which coupled with appropriate media appear to offer new ways of seeing self-government alongside relative cultural and economic autonomy.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:99504

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Presses de l'Universite de Laval

Palavras-Chave #Aboriginal Australians #Indigenous culture #Media policy #Milingimbi #EX #751005 Communication across languages and cultures #400104 Communication and Media Studies #2001 Communication and Media Studies
Tipo

Conference Paper