Georgia Curran in conversation with Enid Nangala Gallagher and other Warlpiri ceremony women from Yuendumu
Event description
Join Georgia Curran in celebration of her new book Ceremony: All Our Yesterdays for Today, co-authored with Wesley Enoch. This special event features a conversation with Enid Nangala Gallagher and other Warlpiri ceremony women from Yuendumu
About the book:
What do you need to know to prosper as a people for 65,000 years or more? The First Knowledges series provides a deep understanding of the expertise, wisdom and ingenuity of Indigenous Australians.
We perform ceremonies every day. Some are personal, some highly organised and others are repeated for generations. For First Nations Australians, ceremonies create the backbone of cultural practice.
Ceremony: All Yesterdays for Today tells how Indigenous ceremonies link people today to those of the past in a continuum of inherited stories, places and memories – from rites of passage to smoking ceremonies and Welcomes to Country, and many others.
The authors focus on examples from their lives, including personal ceremonies from Quandamooka waterways and lands, community-centred ceremonies held by Warlpiri people in the Tanami desert, stories told to them by Elders and experiences of performing at Opening ceremonies for national events. Stories of ceremony are vast and diverse and many ceremonies are of a secret scared nature and cannot be told to those not initiated or intimately connected to the people, as the authors acknowledge. Rather, this book highlights the importance of ceremony across time and place on both a personal as well as national level that recognises and celebrates Australia’s First Nations history and culture.
‘Ceremonies can take many forms; in First Nations cultures it is the sense of intergenerational observance that connects us to our families, our Countries and our histories. Ceremonies are a way of connecting all our yesterdays to today.’
– Wesley Enoch
About Georgia:
Dr Georgia Curran is an anthropologist and ethnomusicologist who has collaborated with Warlpiri people and organisations across the Central Australian Tanami Desert for the last 20 years. She is currently a senior research fellow at the Conservatorium of Music, The University of Sydney. Her publications include Sustaining Indigenous Songs (Berghahn, 2020), two-song books - Jardiwanpa yawulyu and Yurntumu-wardingki juju-ngaliya-kurlangu yawulyu: Warlpiri women's songs from Yuendumu (Batchelor, 2014 and 2017), and an edited collection, Vitality and Change in Warlpiri Songs (Sydney University Press, 2024). Georgia also has broader global interests in minority music traditions, publishing an edited collection on Supporting Vulnerable Performance Traditions (Routledge, 2024) and co-producing a podcast Music!Dance!Culture!.
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