Country, cattle and cooperation: On the potential of Kila in Warmun, Western Australia

IF 0.5 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
Catherine Massola
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Gija people in the East Kimberley community of Warmun (Western Australia) negotiate their engagement with pastoralism with varying degrees of primacy. Through ethnography and oral histories, I explore how Gija people manage pastoralism and its effects through acts of accommodation, adoption, refusal and innovation. I begin by outlining the development of the colonial pastoral industry in Western Australia, state and federal legislation that withheld and underpaid wages to Aboriginal pastoral workers and cattle-killing practices and protective measures. I use ‘Kila’, the bovine species killed for local consumption, as an entry point to explore intercultural relations and Gija relative autonomy within this context. Analysing Kila etymologically and through an ethnographic case study involving its procurement, dissection, and distribution, I find that cooperation is implemented to enable the Kila event. Kila emerges as both a nexus for intercultural mutuality and as a facilitator of distinct opportunities for Gija social and cultural maintenance and recreation.

Abstract Image

国家、牛与合作:西澳大利亚沃蒙基拉的潜力
西澳大利亚沃蒙东金伯利社区的吉贾人以不同程度的首要地位与畜牧业进行谈判。通过民族志和口述历史,我探索了Gija人如何管理畜牧业及其通过适应、采用、拒绝和创新的影响。我首先概述了西澳大利亚殖民地畜牧产业的发展,州和联邦立法扣留和克扣土著畜牧工人的工资,以及杀牛的做法和保护措施。我以“Kila”(为当地消费而宰杀的牛种)为切入点,探讨在这种背景下的跨文化关系和Gija的相对自主性。通过对Kila词源的分析,以及对其采购、解剖和分布的人种学案例研究,我发现合作是实现Kila事件的关键。Kila既是跨文化相互联系的纽带,也是Gija社会和文化维护和娱乐的独特机会的促进者。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
38
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