Viewing ofReference Material
Art students and others conducting research are welcome to make an appointment with us to view the works listed in the adjacent table.
It is also recommended for Europeans to use the online search system at KVK (Karlsruher Virtueller Katalog), in which all German and many European scholarly libraries list their available references. Sometimes the works are available for loan.
A list of further references about Australian art, which however are not yet in our reference collection, is also maintained and continually extended.
Literature in our Collection
(A-L)
James, Diana: "Signposted by Song: cultural routes of the Australian desert. Connedting Cultures and Continents: The Heritage of Routes and Journeys", Historic Environment 25 (3) 2013, S. 30-42
Table of Contents ¦ Cover Text ¦ Review⁄Abstract
Table of Contents
Abstract -31-
Introduction -31-
Intangible signposts to tangible sites -32-
Songlines and Tjukurpa: translation of meaning -33-
Wangkara kulilkatinyi discussing and rethinking as we go along -34-
The Anangu voice: antecedents to the Project -36-
Why Anangu value Songlines research -37-
Ngintaka Songline; the perentie lizard grindstone thief -38-
Kungkarangkalpa: Seven Sisters Songline -39-
Songlines signiicance as Cultural Heritage Routes -40-
References -41-
Review⁄Abstract
Abstract: The songlines of the Western Desert are the tracks of the ancestral beings of the Tjukurpa, Aboriginal creation law, recounted in song and story. This ancient oral mapping tradition covers vast stretches of time and space in the desert regions of Western Australia, Northern Territory and South Australia. Some knowledge of these ancestral cultural routes of the irst peoples of Australia has been shared with the wider community as Aboriginal people share stories of their country through art. However, the complexity and beauty of their oral heritage of song and story is not widely appreciated. Traditional song sagas recount the ancestors exploits and indicate the location of water and food sources essential for survival in these dry lands of Australia. Songlines are living cultural routes, a web of oral knowledge of country that maps places of signiicance for the Indigenous peoples of this land. Appreciation of songlines as a sophisticated system of interconnecting cultural routes mnemonically signposted in song has the potential to expand the concept of cultural routes and heritage practice in Australian and internationally. This paper describes the genesis of an Australian Research Council (ARC) project: Alive with the Dreaming! Songlines of the Western Desert (hereafter The Songlines Project). Several early positive outcomes of the project are presented as part of an iterative research development process.