Artigo Revisado por pares

Kincentric Ecology, Species Maintenance and the Relational Power of Place in Northern Australia

2019; Wiley; Volume: 89; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1002/ocea.5232

ISSN

1834-4461

Autores

Amanda Kearney, John Bradley, Liam M. Brady,

Tópico(s)

Indigenous Health, Education, and Rights

Resumo

Abstract This paper considers themes of species maintenance and place engagement in Yanyuwa country, northern Australia. It traces the complexity of interpretations and relational contexts involved in places that are commonly – and we argue – misleadingly, referred to as increase and magic sites. Examining one specific place, at which people carry out maintenance rituals, we explore the complex bonds that unite Yanyuwa with the geography that is the Ancestral Hill Kangaroo. Not content with the classificatory habit of declaring actions either increase oriented or hunting magic, this research more fully explicates the relational substance of places that play a key role in ecological health. This is achieved by asking how might the profundity of a place of relational importance, such as a maintenance site, be better understood and written of in ways that convey an Indigenous ontology and epistemology?

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