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A sorry requiem

by
November 2005, no. 276

Of Marriage, Violence and Sorcery: The quest for power in Northern Queensland by David McKnight

Ashgate, £45 hb, 259 pp

A sorry requiem

by
November 2005, no. 276

This is the last of David McKnight’s quartet of books on the Lardil people of Mornington Island, with whom he has worked from his first field trip in 1966 until his most recent in 2001. (For reviews in these pages of two of them, From Hunting to Drinking and Going the Whiteman’s Way, see the October 2004 and the February 2005 issues, respectively.) The title is characteristically challenging. A struggle for power in what we are always being assured was a tranquilly ordered society? Most of us have seen the pretty diagrams representing ‘traditional Aboriginal marriage practice’. How could violence and sorcery intrude on those elegant, iron-clad arrangements? Where all is prescribed, how can there be a struggle for power? And power over what?

Inga Clendinnen reviews ‘Of Marriage, Violence and Sorcery: The quest for power in Northern Queensland’ by David McKnight

Of Marriage, Violence and Sorcery: The quest for power in Northern Queensland

by David McKnight

Ashgate, £45 hb, 259 pp

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