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Erich Kolig Erich Kolig i(11959102 works by)
Gender: Male
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1 1 [Review Essay] An Aboriginal History of Ayers Rock Erich Kolig , 1987 single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 2 1987; (p. 93-94)

'There are few places in Australia which rival Ayers Rock for sheer visual spectacularity. Justly, because of its starkness and beauty, it has become the major landmark of the fifth continent. Ayers Rock—or Uluru as its Aboriginal name is—is also probably Australia's largest sacred shrine, a visible embodiment of the Dreamtime. In recent years the round, chubby rock has become a major symbol, and target, of the nation's booming tourist industry—worth between five and fifteen million dollars in tourist revenue, as the book states—which in itself must have posed for its traditional owners no mean anguish, seeing hordes of tourists, women and children among them, year after year, day after day trampling all over it. As a belated redress, Aboriginal title to Uluru was finally acknowledged on 11 November 1983 by the Hawke government and a measure of control restored to the local community.'  (Introduction)

1 [Review Essay] Daughters of the Dreaming Erich Kolig , 1986 single work essay
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 2 1986; (p. 80-82)

'This book is one of the growing number of anthropological works on women by women. When Bell writes in one of her opening passages  that she locates her "analysis within the framework of feminist thought", one may be forgiven for fearing that one is about to encounter the curious astigmatism by which radical feminism manages to misproportion every social reality...'  (Introduction)

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