Academic literature on the topic 'Arrernte'

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Journal articles on the topic "Arrernte"

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Breen, Gavan, and Veronica Dobson. "Central Arrernte." Journal of the International Phonetic Association 35, no. 2 (December 2005): 249–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025100305002185.

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Central Arrernte is the language of an area centred on the present-day town of Alice Springs, in Central Australia. It is one of a group of dialects or closely-related languages spoken or formerly spoken over most of the southeast quarter of the Northern Territory and extending on the east side into the far-western part of Queensland; a slightly less closely-related language extends south into the north-central part of South Australia. They include varieties using the names Anmatyerr, Alyawarr and Antekerrepenh as well as several varieties using the name Arrernte with (nowadays) English geographical qualifiers. The major surviving varieties, Eastern, Central and Western Arrernte, Eastern and Western Anmatyerr, Southern and Northern Alyawarr each have several hundred to a thousand speakers, and are still being learned by many of the children, who grow up bilingual (in English) or multilingual. Breen (2001) is a brief introduction to the phonology of these languages.
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Dobson, Veronica, Rosalie Riley, Jeanette McCormack, and Debbie Hartman. "Interactions Across the Generations — Australia: Learning from Elders." Australian Journal of Indigenous Education 25, no. 2 (October 1997): 24–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1326011100002738.

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This article is based on an interview conducted with four of the central figures in the development and operation of the Arrernte Early Childhood Project. The project works with Aboriginal families in the centre of Australia and is developing culturally appropriate curricula for children aged from three to six years, in the Arrernte language.The project stresses the need to involve grandparents, aunts, uncles and elders in the development of curricula so that the Arrernte culture can stay alive alongside other Australian cultures.
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Breen, Gavan, and Rob Pensalfini. "Arrernte: A Language with No Syllable Onsets." Linguistic Inquiry 30, no. 1 (January 1999): 1–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/002438999553940.

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That syllable onsets are present in all languages is widely regarded as axiomatic, and the preference for syllabifying consonants as onsets over codas is considered a linguistic universal. The Central Australian language Arrernte provides the strongest possible counterevidence to this universal, with phenomena generally used to determine syllabification suggesting that all consonants in Arrernte are syllabified as codas at the word level. Attempts to explain the Arrernte facts in terms of syllables with onsets either make the wrong predictions or require proposals that render the putative onset universal unfalsifiable.
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Tabain, Marija. "A preliminary study of jaw movement in Arrernte consonant production." Journal of the International Phonetic Association 39, no. 1 (March 23, 2009): 33–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0025100308003678.

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This study presents jaw movement data from Central Arrernte, an Australian Aboriginal language with six places of articulation in the stop series, including four coronal places of articulation. The focus of the study is on jaw consonant targets, and on the opening and closing movements of the jaw. As a point of comparison, data are also presented for English, a language with three places of articulation in the stop series. In line with previous results for English, jaw position in Arrernte is lowest for the velar /k/. The apico-post-alveolar (retroflex) /ʈ/, which is not found in English, has a jaw position almost as low as /k/. By contrast, the lamino-alveo-palatal /c/, which is also not found in English, has the highest jaw position. The remaining coronal consonants in Arrernte, /t/ (apico-alveolar and lamino-dental, respectively), show intermediate jaw positions, with differences between speakers. In terms of the kinematic measures examined (namely, variability in distance, duration and velocity of opening and closing movements), results show no consistent differences between English and Arrernte jaw movement.
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Topintzi, Nina, and Andrew Nevins. "Moraic onsets in Arrernte." Phonology 34, no. 3 (December 2017): 615–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0952675717000306.

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The Australian language Arrernte has been argued by Breen & Pensalfini (1999) and Evans & Levinson (2009) to present a case of VC syllabification with coda maximisation, rather than CV syllabification with onset maximisation. In this paper we demonstrate that greater insights into a number of phenomena are achieved when they are analysed with CV syllabification and onset consonants that are moraic, a possibility independently proposed for a wide range of languages by Topintzi (2010). We review a range of evidence from phonetic studies, acquisition and musicology that points towards CV syllabification in Arrernte, and analyse allomorphy, stress assignment, reduplication and the transpositional language game ‘Rabbit Talk’ in terms of reference to moraic structure. The results lend themselves to new directions in the analysis of Arrernte, and provide further evidence for moraic onsets in prosodic morphology.
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Tabain, Marija. "Aspects of Arrernte prosody." Journal of Phonetics 59 (November 2016): 1–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wocn.2016.08.005.

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Morton, John. "Arrernte Present, Arrernte Past: Invasion, Violence, and Imagination in Indigenous Central Australia." Australian Journal of Anthropology 22, no. 1 (April 2011): 147–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1757-6547.2011.00122.x.

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Truong, Tran. "*ABA pronominal stem allomorphy without containment." Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America 8, no. 1 (April 27, 2023): 5546. http://dx.doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v8i1.5546.

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*ABA environments are pockets of morphology that prohibit noncontiguous suppletion, and which show promise to generativists as a diagnostic for the presence of syntactic hierarchical structure. In particular, it identifies Lower Arrernte (Pama-Nyungan) nonsingular pronouns as an AAB-permissive *ABA environment. Morphological contiguity in Lower Arrernte results from the manner in which kintactic features expressing kinship generation and shared patrimoiety must always be bundled together at the same node as co-triggers of suppletion within a realizational morphology. Crucially, this study contradicts earlier accounts of the relevant paradigms in terms of how the categories are ordered by markedness: it argues that the agnatic-harmonic pronouns (i.e., pronouns that refer to groups in which all members belong to the same patrimoiety and even-numbered generations) are the most representationally complex. It emerges that morphological contiguity in Lower Arrernte nonsingulars patterns against the containment relationship observed in comparative suppletion and with the bundling relationship observed in English ablaut.
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Henderson, J. "Introductory Dictionary of Western Arrernte." International Journal of Lexicography 15, no. 3 (September 1, 2002): 229–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ijl/15.3.229.

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Kenny, Anna. "Western Arrernte Pmere Kwetethe Spirits." Oceania 74, no. 4 (June 2004): 276–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/j.1834-4461.2004.tb02855.x.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Arrernte"

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Berry, Lynn Maree. "Alignment and Adjacency in Optimality Theory: evidence from Warlpiri and Arrernte." University of Sydney, Linguistics, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/383.

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The goal of this thesis is to explore alignment and adjacency of constituents in the framework of Optimality Theory. Under the notion of alignment, certain categories, prosodic and morphological, are required to correspond to certain other categories, prosodic or morphological. The alignment of categories is achieved through the operation of constraints which evaluate the wellformedness of outputs. The constraints on the alignment of categories and the ranking of these constraints are examined with emphasis on two Australian languages, Warlpiri and Arrernte. The aim is to provide an adequate account in the theory of Optimality of the processes of stress, reduplication and vowel harmony evident in the data. The thesis expands on the range of edges for the alignment of feet. Foot alignment is developed to account for the fact that the edges of intonational phrases, morphemes, and specific morphemes, as well as phonologically specific syllables, play an active role in determining the location of feet. An additional finding is that the location of feet can also be determined by adjacency, resolving conflict between morphological alignment, and ensuring rhythmic harmony. Requirements on adjacency are further supported to account for segmental harmony, where harmony provides evidence for the simultaneous action of segmental and prosodic processes. The analysis provides a unified account of binary and ternary rhythm recommending modifications to alignment of certain categories, thereby laying the groundwork to deal with variation. The account of variation involves relaxing certain constraints. In addition, the notion of rhythm is expanded to account for onset sensitivity to stress, with evidence of this sensitivity found in reduplication and allomorphy. The interaction of prosodic categories with each other and with morphological categories can be directly captured in OT, providing a unified and coherent account of phenomena, some of which were previously seen as exceptions and, therefore unrelated and arbitrary.
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Berry, Lynn. "Alignment and adjacency in optimality theory evidence from Warlpiri and Arrernte /." Connect to full text, 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/383.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Sydney, 1999.
Title from title screen (viewed Apr. 16, 2008). Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy to the Dept. of Linguistics, Faculty of Arts. Degree awarded 1999; thesis submitted 1998. Includes bibliography. Also available in print form.
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Berry, Lynn Maree. "Alignment and Adjacency in Optimality Theory: evidence from Warlpiri and Arrernte." Thesis, The University of Sydney, 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/383.

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The goal of this thesis is to explore alignment and adjacency of constituents in the framework of Optimality Theory. Under the notion of alignment, certain categories, prosodic and morphological, are required to correspond to certain other categories, prosodic or morphological. The alignment of categories is achieved through the operation of constraints which evaluate the wellformedness of outputs. The constraints on the alignment of categories and the ranking of these constraints are examined with emphasis on two Australian languages, Warlpiri and Arrernte. The aim is to provide an adequate account in the theory of Optimality of the processes of stress, reduplication and vowel harmony evident in the data. The thesis expands on the range of edges for the alignment of feet. Foot alignment is developed to account for the fact that the edges of intonational phrases, morphemes, and specific morphemes, as well as phonologically specific syllables, play an active role in determining the location of feet. An additional finding is that the location of feet can also be determined by adjacency, resolving conflict between morphological alignment, and ensuring rhythmic harmony. Requirements on adjacency are further supported to account for segmental harmony, where harmony provides evidence for the simultaneous action of segmental and prosodic processes. The analysis provides a unified account of binary and ternary rhythm recommending modifications to alignment of certain categories, thereby laying the groundwork to deal with variation. The account of variation involves relaxing certain constraints. In addition, the notion of rhythm is expanded to account for onset sensitivity to stress, with evidence of this sensitivity found in reduplication and allomorphy. The interaction of prosodic categories with each other and with morphological categories can be directly captured in OT, providing a unified and coherent account of phenomena, some of which were previously seen as exceptions and, therefore unrelated and arbitrary.
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Kral, Inge. "The socio-historical development of literacy in Arrernte : a case study of the introduction of writing in an aboriginal language and the implications for current vernacular literacy practices /." Connect to thesis, 2000. http://eprints.unimelb.edu.au/archive/00001023.

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Stenbäck, Tomas. "Where Life Takes Place, Where Place Makes Life : Theoretical Approaches to the Australian Aboriginal Conceptions of Place." Thesis, Högskolan i Gävle, Religionsvetenskap, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:hig:diva-26156.

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The purpose of this essay has been to relate the Australian Aboriginal conceptions of place to three different theoretical perspectives on place, to find what is relevant in the Aboriginal context, and what is not. The aim has been to find the most useful theoretical approaches for further studies on the Australian Aboriginal conceptions of place. The investigation is a rendering of research and writings on Australian Aboriginal religion, a recording of general views on research on religion and space, a recounting of written material of three theoretical standpoints on place (the Insider standpoint, the Outsider Standpoint and the Meshwork standpoint), and a comparison of the research on the Aboriginal religion to the three different standpoints.  The results show that no single standpoint is gratifying for studies of the Aboriginal conceptions of place, but all three standpoints contribute in different ways. There are aspects from all three standpoints revealing the importance of place to the Aboriginal peoples.  The most useful theoretical approaches for studies on the Australian Aboriginal conceptions of place are: Place as a living entity, an ancestor and an extension of itself; place as movement, transformation and continuity; place as connection, existential orientation and the paramount focus, and; place as the very foundation of the entire religion.
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Wilkins, David P. "Mparntwe Arrernte (Aranda) : studies in the structure and semantics of grammar." Phd thesis, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/9908.

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This thesis is essentially a description of the grammar of Mparntwe Arrernte, the traditional language of Alice Springs, in Central Australia. The main aims of the thesis are two-fold: (i) to provide a comprehensive descriptive overview of the language and (ii) to give some indication of how the language conveys, reflects and responds to the socio­ cultural concerns of its speakers. To fulfill these aims, chapters surveying broad areas of the grammar are interleaved with chapters that survey particular grammatical and semantic phenomena in detail. A major concern of the thesis is to describe the semantic, as well as the structural, details of the grammar. Where possible, natural language definitions are provided for grammatical elements and structures. Chapter One is divided into four main sections: the first places Mpamtwe Arrernte within the context of other Arandic languages; the second provides an introduction to the post-contact history and culture of the speakers; the third is an account of the fieldwork for the thesis and the nature of the community's control over the research; and the fourth provides an introduction to the linguistic aspects of this work. It discusses the semantic and functional orientation taken here and introduces the four parts of speech - nominals, verbs, adverbs, and particle clitics - around which much of the thesis is organised. Chapter Two is a brief description of segmental phonology and introduces the orthography which is used throughout this work. Chapter Three centres on the description of nominals and nominal morphology. As nominals are defined by their occurrence, and position, within a simple noun phrase, the structure of simple noun phrases is also discussed. Chapter Four focuses in on one aspect of nominal morphology: case and case marking. The structure of the case system is outlined and the functions of each of the fourteen cases is discussed in detail. Chapter Five is primarily a description of verbs and verb morphology, although it begins with a look at case assigning predicates (including nominal predicates) generally. Chapter Six examines the "category of associated motion", a unique and elaborated grammatical category with which verbs may be inflected. Each of fourteen forms in this group is defined and their function in discourse and reports of events is discussed. Chapter Seven deals with adverbs and adverb morphology, focusing particularly on spatial concepts. Chapter Eight provides a basic inventory of particle/clitics and introduces the phenomenon of particle/clitic insertion into a verb stem. Chapter Nine focuses on one conversation and demonstrates the semantic contribution of five distinct particle/clitics to the conversation. The way an implicature of criticism and/or complaint is derived using these forms is also investigated. Chapter Ten discusses aspects of syntax. Complex noun phrases (including NPs modified by relative clauses), basic clause structure, discourse structure, and complementation are described. Chapter Eleven centres on switch-reference and demonstrates how a narrow syntactic definition of coreference fails to account for subtle semantic contrasts which can be expressed. This chapter also investigates the morphological relationship between switch­ reference and several other complex construction types. Appendix 1 contains twelve texts which are the source for many examples in the thesis. Appendix 2 is a lexicon containing the suffixes, clitics, and most of the lexemes which appear in the examples and texts.
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Poetsch, Susan. "Arrernte at heart: Children's use of their traditional language and English in a Central Australian Aboriginal community." Phd thesis, 2022. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/259016.

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This thesis is a rich description of a group of primary school aged children's language at Ltyentye Apurte, an Eastern Arrernte community in Central Australia. It documents morphosyntactic properties of their speech and broader aspects of their communicative competence. Notwithstanding variation in the cohort, this thesis finds that the children are essentially maintaining Arrernte rather than shifting to a contact code. Theoretically and methodologically the thesis draws on aspects of language documentation and language socialisation traditions, combining discourse and ethnographic data. The discourse data comprises recordings in three contexts: textless picture book narratives, spontaneous first-person recounts told in the sand and classroom interactions. The ethnographic data comprises my participant-observations and conversations with parents/carers and educators which both contextualise and enhance interpretation of the discourse data. Analysis of the narratives elicited through textless picture books is based on audio recordings of 17 children aged 5;9-10;10 and three adults each telling four stories, a total of 80 recordings. It investigates use of two morphosyntactic constructions that are distinctive features of Arrernte and integral to referent tracking and/or event packaging: the definitising function of 3sg pronouns and the switch reference system. Variation in the children's use of these constructions, when seen in the context of each child's language profile, is found to be better explained by social factors than by age. Analysis of a culturally valued communicative event type, scary stories told in the sand, is based on the video recordings of five children aged 7;4-9;6, investigating their integration of speech, drawing and use of a stylus. It introduces a new approach describing how children lay out their stories with entities (people, scary beings, landmarks), path lines (protagonists' journeys) and swipes (transitions between scenes). Their drawings include 'Western' style icons and graphic elements found in adult performance of sand talk genres in Central Australian communities. The subject of the children's personal experience stories provides evidence of their growing understanding of the physical and social geography of the community, including locations and behaviours of widely known monsters and similar beings. Analysis of classroom talk is based on a video recording of a mainstream curriculum Maths lesson in a Year 1-2 class of 20 students. It focuses on two of the students (aged 7;4 and 8;3) as they complete a pair task and talk with their teacher. They are found to work co-operatively and draw on both Arrernte and their early English language proficiencies to understand the requirements of the task and learn the lesson concepts. Their interactions and linguistic behaviours evidence early socialisation into the school environment. This thesis contributes to research on children's language and ways of communicating in a contact situation, informed by empirical and qualitative data. It adds to the growing number of case studies of Aboriginal children's language in Australia and to the typological diversity in child language research globally. The study suggests factors that mitigate against language loss under pressure from English. It foregrounds the community's ideologies, advocacy and efforts to provide the linguistic, sociocultural and educational conditions that nurture children's Arrernte, alongside English.
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Macfarlane, Ingereth Ann Sinclair. "Entangled places: interactional history in the western Simpson Desert, central Australia." Phd thesis, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/8899.

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This work starts with a question: ‘what makes a place entangled’? Posing this question implies an understanding that places have qualities that are fruitfully understood in terms of the concept of ‘entanglement’. This thesis uses the term to express and explore the inextricably inter-woven temporal components of a place that emerge from stories of its history that were either direct accounts, traces in the patterned objects on the ground, or retrieved from archives. These qualities are interpreted as arising through interactions between people, objects and the physical and historical characteristics of a place through time. It is this relationship between interaction and entanglement that the thesis ‘has a good look around’, to use a key phrase used by Irrwanyere Aboriginal Corporation members. The threads implicated in the historical entanglement of particular places are traced. These are: experiences as an archaeologist and a historian in contemporary places of the western Simpson Desert, mediated by Irrwanyere Aboriginal Corporation members who speak for that country; direct stories of the place; texts generated by white explorers, surveyors, scientists, managers and tourists; the enduring presence of the creator Ancestors; and spatial patterns of material objects. Why is recognition of the processes that generate such entanglement important? It shifts attention. Focusing on their entangled character brings to the fore what are otherwise missing histories of Indigenous labour and concern. Importantly it also disallows unitary categories for places as being either ‘Aboriginal’ or ‘European’, ‘pre-historic’ or ‘colonial’; often assumed to be separate components of history. The challenge then is to track the interaction of these histories. The aim is to make the missing stories of western Simpson people in place available, in a way where the place of the story retains its specifics, but is simultaneously stretched into an expanded network of social and historical connections. Three inter-related themes that emerged as consequential in understanding the dynamics of people and place in the western Simpson Desert are developed. These are, firstly, cross-cultural interactions during intense and rapid change associated with the construction of the Overland Telegraph Line. Remembered as a technological and political achievement, an agent of modernity from 1872, an unintended outcome of its installation was the incision of a continuous ‘contact zone’ through the country and lives of the local Indigenous people. The thesis looks at how these large-scale processes of change played out locally in a particular place – the repeater station at Charlotte Waters. Secondly, the thesis looks at interactions of people and place through the lens of water. Water is vital, especially in the desert. What distinct expectations and understandings do different people bring to their relations with water, as revealed through their practices in relation to it? Thirdly, the thesis considers what makes and maintains connections between places. While the interactions explored in this work are specific to the particular places and region, the historical implications and the approach are applicable in any place.
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Trudinger, David. "Converting salvation : protestant missionaries in Central Australia, 1930s-40s." Phd thesis, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/8219.

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Using the intellectual, political and discursive ‘construction’ of Presbyterian mission site, Ernabella, in Central Australia during the 1930s and 40s, and against the background of the established and iconic Lutheran mission at Hermannsburg, missionary discourse on Indigenous Australians is examined, particularly the discourse in which significant Presbyterian missionary JRB Love and his fellow churchman Dr Charles Duguid participated. Discursive and political interactions between these two and missionaries such as FW Albrecht of Hermannsburg and John Flynn of the AIM are utilized to explore the fraught and fragmented nature of the missionary discourse in Central Australia in relation to issues such as rationing and feeding, curing indigenous illnesses, ‘half-castes’ and the removal of children, work and education issues, language and translation, and the christianization, conversion and ‘civilising of indigenous people. Missionary discourse and praxis is approached through a provocative reading of the French Jewish philosopher Emmanuel Levinas whose delineation of the face to face encounter with the other, where responsibility is taken for ‘men dispossessed and without food’, is posited as having some relevance and resonance to and within the mission site itself. While conflict, unequal power relations and paternalism were evident, the missionary discourse sharing traces of racial and cultural disparagement of Aborigines with a wider colonial/settler discourse, the general ‘avidity of the colonial gaze’ was diluted I the mission contact zone with traces of hospitality which at least to some extent replicated and reciprocated the politics of hospitality proffered to the missionaries by ‘their’ Aborigines. Central to this discourse of hospitality was the unorthodox preparedness of the Love/Duguid administration at Ernabella and (to a lesser, but surprising, extent) FW Albrecht’s regime at Hermannsburg, to ‘convert’ the notion of ‘salvation’ from one with mainly spiritual connotations to one more to do with the physical ‘saving’ of the indigenous body and the indigenous collective: saving bodies became as important, if not more so, than saving souls, the traditional missionary imperative. While some complicity with colonial, cultural and religious regimes for re-forming and re-making the indigenous body is acknowledged, some reassessment is suggested to postcolonial (or postmodern) readings of mission sites as always places predominantly of cultural destruction, domination and hegemony.
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Books on the topic "Arrernte"

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Broad, Neil. Eastern and Central Arrernte picture dictionary. Alice Springs NT: IAD Press, 2008.

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Veronica, Dobson, ed. Arelhe-kenhe Merrethene: Arrernte traditional healing. Alice Springs, NT: IAD Press, 2007.

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Veronica, Dobson, ed. Eastern and central Arrernte to English dictionary. Alice Springs: IAD Press, 1994.

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Institute for Aboriginal Development (Alice Springs, N.T.), ed. A Learner's wordlist of eastern and central Arrernte. Alice Springs, NT: Institute for Aboriginal Development, 1991.

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Green, Jenny. A learner's guide to Eastern and Central Arrernte. Alice Spring: IAD Press, 1994.

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Turner, Margaret-Mary. Arrernte foods: Foods from Central Australia = Nhenhe-areye anwerne-arle arlkweme. Alice Springs: IAD Press, 1994.

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John, Henderson, ed. Bush foods: Arrernte foods from Central Australia = Nhenhe-areye anwerne-arle arlkweme. Alice Springs, N.T: IAD Press, 1996.

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Rockchild, Liesl. Bush toys: A living history : a collection of toys from Eastern Arrernte Communities in Central Australia. Alice Springs, N.T: Liesl Rockchild Arts Management and Design, 1999.

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1948-, Brock Peggy, ed. Indigenous peoples and religious change. Leiden: Brill, 2005.

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Read, Peter. Charles Perkins: A biography. Ringwood, Vic: Penguin, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Arrernte"

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Wilkins, David P. "Switch-reference in Mparntwe Arrernte (Aranda)." In Typological Studies in Language, 141. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/tsl.15.07wil.

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Harkins, Jean, and David P. Wilkins. "11 Mparntwe Arrernte and the Search for Lexical Universals." In Studies in Language Companion Series, 285. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/slcs.25.15har.

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Breen, G. "Arrernte." In Encyclopedia of Language & Linguistics, 481–84. Elsevier, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b0-08-044854-2/05023-9.

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Gill, Sam D. "The Arrernte." In Storytracking, 121–77. Oxford University Press, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195115871.003.0006.

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Henderson, John. "The word in Eastern/Central Arrernte." In Word, 100–124. Cambridge University Press, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cbo9780511486241.005.

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Gill, Sam D. "Storytracking the Arrernte through the Academic Bush." In Storytracking, 3–19. Oxford University Press, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195115871.003.0001.

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Wilkins, David. "The Concept of Place Among the Arrernte." In The Land is a Map: Placenames of Indigenous Origin in Australia. ANU Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/lm.03.2009.02.

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Wilkins, David P. "Alternative Representations of Space: Arrernte Narratives in Sand." In The Visual Narrative Reader. Bloomsbury Academic, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781474283670.ch-010.

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"CHANGING CONCEPTS OF EMBODIMENT AND ILLNESS AMONG THE WESTERN ARRERNTE AT HERMANNSBURG MISSION." In Indigenous Peoples and Religious Change, 227–48. BRILL, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789047405559_012.

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Austin-Broos, Diane. "‘Shifting’: The Western Arrernte’s outstation movement." In Experiments in self-determination: Histories of the outstation movement in Australia. ANU Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.22459/esd.01.2016.04.

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Conference papers on the topic "Arrernte"

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Anderson, Victoria B. "The perception of coronals in Western Arrernte." In 5th European Conference on Speech Communication and Technology (Eurospeech 1997). ISCA: ISCA, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/eurospeech.1997-146.

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Tabain, Marija, and Richard Beare. "A Preliminary Ultrasound Study of Nasal and Lateral Coronals in Arrernte." In Interspeech 2016. ISCA, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/interspeech.2016-568.

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Tabain, Marija, and Richard Beare. "An Ultrasound Study of Alveolar and Retroflex Consonants in Arrernte: Stressed and Unstressed Syllables." In Interspeech 2017. ISCA: ISCA, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/interspeech.2017-578.

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Tabain, Marija, Richard Beare, and Andrew Butcher. "Formant Measures of Vowels Adjacent to Alveolar and Retroflex Consonants in Arrernte: Stressed and Unstressed Position." In Interspeech 2018. ISCA: ISCA, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.21437/interspeech.2018-1126.

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