Seafaring : canoeing ancient songlines / Victor Briggs.

By: Briggs, Victor [author,, narrator.]Material type: SoundSoundCopyright date: ©2023Publisher: [Melbourne, Vic.] : ABC Audio, 2023Copyright date: ℗2023Edition: CD edition ; UnabridgedDescription: 2 audio discs (CD) (02 hr., 14 min.) : digital, stereo ; 12 cm ; in containerContent type: spoken word Media type: audio Carrier type: audio discISBN: 9781038638267Subject(s): Audiobooks | Seafaring life -- Australia | Voyages and travels -- History | Aboriginal Australians -- History | Hawaiians -- History | Indigenous peoplesOnline resources: Click here to access online Read by the author.Summary: 'For various reasons, this story cannot be proven. But that does not matter to me because in my Aboriginal way of being and knowing, stories like my uncle's do not need modern scientific proof to have validity - the role of story in Indigenous community is key to all aspects of our Culture.' A long time ago Indigenous Australian seafarers sailed to Hawaii on the trade winds. When they got there they exchanged skills, information and technology. A story told to his uncle by an Indigenous Hawaiian elder would change the shape of Gumbaynggirr/Gamilaroi man Victor Briggs' life, and send him on a search for answers to the question: were Indigenous Australians master navigators of one of the world's largest oceans, the South Pacific? Is this yet another example of suppression of the past in colonial history? Bringing voice to his ancestors and the power of oral storytelling, Victor shares his compelling journey into the past through research, stories and visions. This seed of an idea is crying out for further research about the world's largest ocean and its Indigenous trading networks.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
wnor- audio Northam
305 .899 15 BRI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) On hold AL4200024984XB

2 audio CDs.

Duration: 02:14:57.

Read by the author.

'For various reasons, this story cannot be proven. But that does not matter to me because in my Aboriginal way of being and knowing, stories like my uncle's do not need modern scientific proof to have validity - the role of story in Indigenous community is key to all aspects of our Culture.' A long time ago Indigenous Australian seafarers sailed to Hawaii on the trade winds. When they got there they exchanged skills, information and technology. A story told to his uncle by an Indigenous Hawaiian elder would change the shape of Gumbaynggirr/Gamilaroi man Victor Briggs' life, and send him on a search for answers to the question: were Indigenous Australians master navigators of one of the world's largest oceans, the South Pacific? Is this yet another example of suppression of the past in colonial history? Bringing voice to his ancestors and the power of oral storytelling, Victor shares his compelling journey into the past through research, stories and visions. This seed of an idea is crying out for further research about the world's largest ocean and its Indigenous trading networks.

Adult.

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