Published Resources Details

Book

Author
Smith, W. Ramsay
Title
Myths & Legends of the Australian Aboriginals
Imprint
George G. Harrap, London, Bombay and Sydney, 1930, 356 + 38 plates pp
Description

This title was republished in:
1970 by the Johnson Reprint Corporation, New York City;
1985 by Oceania Press, Tokyo - six stories were published in an illustrated edtion;
1996 by Senate (an imprint of Random House UK) in paperback;
1998 by Tiger Books International, Middlesex, United Kingdom as a paperback.

Abstract

The original publication was reviewed in Nature 127, 161 (1931) [31 January 1931]. The Abstract of the review is informative:

"DR. RAMSAY SMITH classifies the myths and legends of the Australian aborigines which he has collected in this volume into 'origins', that is, stories of the creation and beginnings of things; animal myths; religious, social, and personal myths; and has strung them together in the form of a con-nected narrative by notes on customs and beliefs cognate to each class. These notes give the un-instructed reader a general view of aboriginal culture as a background for the stories. Dr. Ramsay Smith is fully alive to the importance of aboriginal legendary lore in its bearing upon their institutions, and it is therefore surprising to find that, even though he disclaims any intention of giving a scientific exposition of Australian mythology, there is no indication of where and when the material was collected. Except in one or two cases, the name of the tribe in which the myth occurred is not mentioned. All that we are told is that the myths refer to "only a few localities in Australia and only a few tribes in them". As the stories, which are very much 'written up', bear very directly upon problems of aboriginal belief, this is a grave defect all the more, perhaps, because the book is intended to be popular."
See: https://doi.org/10.1038/127161b0

People

EOAS ID: bib/ASBS11688.htm

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"... the rengitj, as a visible mark or imprint on the land, is characterised as a place of origin, the repository of all names, as well as a kind of mapped visual expression of the connection between people and places which is to be carried out in the temporal sequence of the journey." Fanca Tamisari (1998) 'Body, Vision and Movement: In the footprints of the ancestors'. Oceania 68(4) p260