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John Mulvaney John Mulvaney i(A29097 works by) (a.k.a. Derek John Mulvaney; D. J. Mulvaney)
Born: Established: 26 Oct 1925 Yarram, Yarram - Woodside area, Central Gippsland, Gippsland, Victoria, ; Died: Ceased: 21 Sep 2016
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 'A Sense of Making History' : Australian Aboriginal Studies 1961-1985 John Mulvaney , 2015 single work criticism
— Appears in: The Wentworth Lectures : Honouring Fifty Years of Australian Indigenous Studies 2015; (p. 75-89)
1 [Review] The Biggest Estate on Earth : How Aborigines Made Australia John Mulvaney , 2012 single work review
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 1 2012; (p. 108-110)

— Review of The Biggest Estate on Earth : How Aborigines Made Australia Bill Gammage , 2011 single work non-fiction

'Bill Gammage has done Indigenous Australians a great service and other Australians should ponder his thesis. This book is a great read and an intellectual and moral achievement. Well written, insightful, scholarly and continental in scope, it is a landmark in our historical appreciation of Australia’s landscape in (Gammage’s omnibus chronological term) ‘1788’.'  (Introduction)

1 5 y separately published work icon Digging Up a Past John Mulvaney , Sydney : University of New South Wales Press , 2011 Z1766295 2011 single work autobiography
1 Academy Editions of Australian Literature John Mulvaney , 2007-2008 single work correspondence
— Appears in: Australian Book Review , December-January no. 297 2007-2008; (p. 4)
1 2 y separately published work icon Paddy Cahill of Oenpelli John Mulvaney , Canberra : Aboriginal Studies Press , 2004 Z1172056 2004 single work biography This biography recounts the story of one of the Northern Territory's historically colourful characters who was an energetic frontiersman, pioneer of tropical horticulture, agriculture, and more controversially, Protector of Aborigines. Viewed from today he was a stern manager although his views changed significantly with time.
1 Museum Musings John Mulvaney , 2004 single work essay
— Appears in: Conversations , Winter vol. 5 no. 1 2004; (p. 24-31)
1 1 y separately published work icon My Dear Spencer : The Letters of F.J.Gillen to Baldwin Spencer F. J. Gillen , Baldwin Spencer , John Mulvaney (editor), Howard Morphy (editor), Alison Petch (editor), Hyland House , 2001 12249560 2001 selected work correspondence diary

'The extraordinary collection of letters has remained unpublished for nearly a century. It sheds vivid light on race relations, social conditions and Aboriginal culture in Central Australia, It also documents a crucial and poorly understood period in the history of anthropology. The book makes an invaluable contribution to the understanding of central Australian Aboriginal society, and to current debates concerning land rights.'  (Publication summary)

1 1 y separately published work icon From the Frontier : Outback Letters to Baldwin Spencer Baldwin Spencer , John Mulvaney (editor), Alison Petch (editor), Howard Morphy (editor), Crows Nest : Allen and Unwin , 2000 11976190 2000 single work correspondence

This is the story of three men and three frontiers.

In the nineteenth century the centre of the continent was, to white Australians, a vast forbidding emptiness. The completion of the Overland Telegraph Line in the 1870s brought with it a new knowledge of the area, as well as a number of intruders to a landscape familiar to Aboriginal people for thirty millennia. Among the newcomers were a policeman, Ernest Cowle, and a telegraph official, Paddy Byrne, living in frontier settlements hundreds of kilometres from the nearest Europeans.

'From 1894 to 1925, Cowle and Byrne wrote letters to pioneering anthropologist and biologist, Baldwin Spencer, whom they had met during the 1894 Horn Scientific Expedition to central Australia. Neither expected their letters to be read by any person other than Spencer, and both made observations which they would never voice to each other. Yet through their letters, and the Spencer and Gillen books, they became linked to such giants of intellectual history as James Frazer, Emile Durkheim and Sigmund Freud. And both became figures, however minute, on the frontier of discovery, of new ways of looking at human experience in all its diversity.

'The subjects of their letters were the Aboriginal people, the landscape in which they lived and the unusual flora and fauna of their habitat. These earthy and thoughtful men offered an extended report from the frontier of the relations between white and black Australians, a place then characterised by mutual incomprehension, outbreaks of violence and the vast distance between two seemingly incompatible ways of responding to an extreme environment.

'A moment in time, a place on the edge, two men writing to a third; From the Frontier combines local history, race relations and scientific discovery, and enters a place whose very strangeness tells us much about our past-and our present.'  (Publication summary)

1 Vale Alec Bolton 1926-1996 John Mulvaney , 1997 single work obituary (for Alec Bolton )
— Appears in: Newsletter (Australian Scholarly Editions Centre) , April no. 2 1997; (p. 9-10)
1 Plan to Publish Harpur's Poems John Mulvaney , 1995 single work correspondence
— Appears in: The Canberra Times , 12 September 1995; (p. 10)
1 The Namoi Bunyip John Mulvaney , 1994 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 1 1994; (p. 36-38)

'During the early years of European colonisation, Aboriginal people across southeastern Australia told colonists about fearsome monsters inhabiting deep river pools and lakes. A considerable interest was shown in locating and identifying the beast. It came to be called bunyip, a Victorian name derived from the Wergaia dialect in the northwest.'  (Introduction)

1 Donald Thomson's Report on the Northern Territory Coastal Patrol and the Special Reconnaissance Unit John Mulvaney , 1992 single work criticism
— Appears in: Aboriginal History , vol. 16 no. 1992; (p. 1-57)
'This paper provides excerpts from (the source document on difficult-to-read carbon copy) Squadron Leader Donald Thomson's official submission in April 1943. There are 71 pages of report and many appendices. The report is repetitious, and the appendices frequently contain material already discussed. As the central concern of Aboriginal History is with Aboriginal people, I have edited the closely typed manuscript. Those sections which are reproduced include those which explain the background to this remarkable enterprise, or are necessary to the understanding of activities, and particularly all sections which refer to the participation of Aboriginal men and the one Torres Strait Islander enlisted man. I have indicated those sections where omissions were made, which sometimes are extensive. The final text has been reduced to fewer than 30,000 words from probably twice that length. It is significant that Thomson's participation in a scheme to organise Aboriginal warriors in the defence of the northern coast began in June 1941, five months before Japan bombed Pearl Harbour. It indicates military concern for the defence of the north and the expectation of a Japanese landing once hostilities commenced. Because the plan was implemented before the bombing of Darwin in February 1942, its background is reproduced here.' (Source: Abstract)
1 Aboriginals in History John Mulvaney , 1988 single work review
— Appears in: Overland , June no. 111 1988; (p. 92-95)

— Review of My Place Sally Morgan , 1987 single work autobiography
1 'A Sense of Making History' : Australian Aboriginal Studies 1961-1986 John Mulvaney , 1986 single work criticism
— Appears in: Australian Aboriginal Studies , no. 2 1986; (p. 48-56)

'Exactly a quarter of a century ago, on 15 May 1961, 55 scholars assembled in University House to discuss the future of Aboriginal Studies. Stimulated by the prospects, Bill Stanner (Sheils 1963.XIV) later remarked that the participants "had a sense of making history". As convenor of the meeting, Stanner (Sheils 1963:XII) enunciated the following criteria for attendance. "Everyone should be invited who had authoritative knowledge of any relevant field of research; all appropriate academic disciplines should be represented; the sole concern should be with problems of fundamental study; and the approach should be truly national." By 1964, the Act which created the Institute was operating and I was elected to its first Council. As I have served on Council for all but two years since that time, I decided to reflect upon the Institute, its achievements and its critics over its first quarter century, as the first major theme in this lecture. Then follows some consideration of archaeology, its achievements and some of its problems.'  (Publication abstract)

1 y separately published work icon So Much That is New : Baldwin Spencer, 1860-1929, a Biography John Mulvaney , J. H. Calaby , Carlton : Melbourne University Press , 1985 Z1766304 1985 single work biography
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