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Karl Neuenfeldt Karl Neuenfeldt i(A86927 works by)
Gender: Male
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Works By

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1 5 y separately published work icon Steady Steady: The Life and Music of Seaman Dan Seaman Dan , Karl Neuenfeldt , Acton : Aboriginal Studies Press , 2012 Z1921258 2012 single work autobiography 'Born on Thursday Island in 1929, Seaman Dan didnt release his debut album, Follow the Sun, until his 70th birthday. In the next ten years he released five albums, showcasing traditional music from the Torres Strait, as well as those revealing his love of jazz and blues. Steady, Steady: The life and music of Seaman Dan is replete with Uncle Seamans stories of his active and sometimes dangerous life in the islands in the heyday of pearl diving and other jobs, and his later development as a professional singer/musician.' (Source: The Book Depository website www.bookdepository.co.uk)
1 3 y separately published work icon Landscapes of Indigenous Performance : Music, Song and Dance of the Torres Strait and Arnhem Land Fiona Magowan (editor), Karl Neuenfeldt (editor), Canberra : Aboriginal Studies Press , 2005 Z1460668 2005 single work criticism

'This book shows how traditional music and dance have responded to colonial control in the past and more recently to other external forces beyond local control. It looks at musical pasts and presents as a continuum of creativity; at contemporary cultural performance as a contested domain; and at cross-cultural issues of recording and teaching music and dance as experienced by Indigenous leaders and educators, and non-Indigenous researchers and scholars. Indigenous and non-Indigenous contributors demonstrate how local music and dance genres have been subject to missionary, institutional, popular and global influences.

The contributors offer an understanding of the cultural background and history of Torres Strait music; they discuss how contemporary Christian music and dance in Arnhem Land incorporate traditional ritual; they unpack the complex form and structure of an Australian Aboriginal song series; and they examine the transformation of a nineteenth-century American popular song into a 'traditional' anthem of the Torres Strait. The book also examines the interface between Aboriginal ritual, movement and the environment as portrayed on film; and explores the issues raised by the presence of Aboriginal performers in the white university classroom.' Source: www.aiatsis.gov.au/aboriginal_studies_press/ (Sighted 18/01/2008).

1 [Review] My Island Home : A Torres Strait Memoir Karl Neuenfeldt , 2004 single work review
— Appears in: Queensland Review , December vol. 11 no. 2 2004; (p. 111-112)

— Review of My Island Home : A Torres Strait Memoir John Singe , 2003 single work autobiography
'John Singe has contributed to the scholarly literature on the islands~ peoples and cultures of Torres Strait in his previous books: Torres Strait: People and History (1979 and 1988); Culture in Change: Torres Strait History" in Photographs (1988); and Among Islands (1993). These books canvassed the history, multicultural diversity and dynamics of a unique area of Australia, once a frontier outpost but no," fully integrated into the economy, politics and concerns of mainland Australia. The Torres Strait region is scattered with many islands, 14 of,which are inhabited. They are home to approximately 6000 Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians and migrants.' (Introduction)
1 'The Saving Grace of Social Culture' : Early Popular Music and Performance Culture on Thursday Island, Torres Strait, Queensland Karl Neuenfeldt , Steve Mullins , 2001 single work essay
— Appears in: Queensland Review , November vol. 8 no. 2 2001; (p. 1-20)
'This article explores the dissemination of globalised popular culture forms into the 'white culture' of colonial Thursday Island (henceforth TI), the administrative centre of Torres Strait in northern Queensland. The analysis draws on a variety of media sources from approximately 1881 to 1906. It is grounded in an historical understanding of Torres Strait as a place of cultural convergence and also a society affected profoundly by the transnational flows and connections of popular culture forms, such as music, used in part to popularise British Imperialism (MacKenzie, 1992). Both 'high' and 'low' culture are examined to illustrate how British and North American cultural values and institutions helped create hybrid forms which contained aspects of the two main lineages of Australian popular culture, as explored by Whiteoak (2001; 1999; 1993), Waterhouse (1995), Johnson (1987), and Bisset (1979). Our goal in this article, and other on-going research, is to appreciate TI as the hub of this process for Torres Strait.' (Introduction) 
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