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y separately published work icon Oceania periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2014... vol. 84 no. 3 November 2014 of Oceania est. 1930 Oceania
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'In Euro-American intellectual discourse gambling has become a metaphor for understanding social life, while in public life gambling is the subject of moralizing, medicalization, and gendered conflict over its status as leisure or vice. This introduction explores how one might approach the ways in which Melanesian peoples have comprehended their own worlds through gambling. I invite readers to consider our portrayals of indigenous ideas of ‘what gambling is about’ as alternative theorizations of gambling as a phenomenon. These theories of gambling are based upon cosmological premises that may appear unusual but which nevertheless intersect productively with Euro-American typologies of gambling and gamblers. To propagate this, my introduction first provides a brief history of gambling in Melanesia, and secondly places the special issue with respect to the relevant tropes in the sociology and anthropology of gambling, and the interdisciplinary field of gambling studies. A final section compares intersecting themes across the articles that together provide the basis of a collective intervention into gambling-related fields.'  (Introduction)

Notes

  • Contents indexed selectively.

Contents

* Contents derived from the 2014 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
[Review Essay] Coranderrk : We Will Show the Country, Maria Nugent , single work essay

'The book Coranderrk: We Will Show the Country is an annotated version of the script of a play by the same name, complemented by a couple of excellent chapters on the history of the Coranderrk Aboriginal settlement and another on the play's development, production, and performance. Using the method known as verbatim or documentary theatre, the play's script is composed almost entirely of extracts taken from the minutes of evidence to an inquiry into Coranderrk held in 1881. The inquiry was the outcome of a sustained campaign by the Kulin people, including petitions and deputations to government, for the right to control their own affairs. Historian Richard Broome has argued that for the Coranderrk residents matters of ‘right behaviour’ and proper governance were at the heart of the inquiry and the broader struggle for autonomy of which it was a part.1 After a litany of complaints against authoritarian superintendents and repeated calls for the reinstatement of the Kulin people's preferred manager, John Green, a board of inquiry was established. It met over two and half months, hearing testimony from 69 witnesses, including 22 Aboriginal people, and it also generated further letters and petitions from the Aboriginal residents.'  (Introduction)

(p. 349–351)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Last amended 17 Nov 2017 09:30:37
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