Showing 3532 items
matching language-aboriginals
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Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book with CD, Denise Smith-Ali, Djerap 3, 2010
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, birds -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book with CD, Denise Smith-Ali, Djerap 4, 2010
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, birds -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book with CD, Charmaine Bennell, Maambakoort 1, 2010
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, sea, water -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book with CD, Charmaine Bennell, Maambakoort 2, 2010
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, sea, water -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book with CD, Charmaine Bennell, Maambakoort 3, 2010
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, sea, water -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book with CD, Charmaine Bennell, Maambakoort 4, 2010
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, sea, water -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book with CD, Charmaine Bennell, Marlak 1, 2009
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, plants, insects -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book with CD, Charmaine Bennell, Marlak 2, 2009
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, plants, insects -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book with CD, Charmaine Bennell, Marlak 3, 2009
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, plants, insects -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book with CD, Charmaine Bennell, Marlak 4, 2009
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, plants, insects -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
CD with Book, Denise Smith-Ali, Djerap CD (Levels 1-4), 2010
Language reader.CDnoongar, western australia, birds -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
CD with Book, Charmaine Bennell, Maambakoort Readers CD (Levels 1-4), 2010
Language reader.CDnoongar, western australia, sea, water -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
CD with Book, Charmaine Bennell, Marlak Readers CD (Levels 1-4), 2009
Language reader.CDnoongar, western australia, plants, insects -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Denise Smith-Ali, Barna 1, 2010
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, animals -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Denise Smith-Ali, Barna 2, 2010
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, animals -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Denise Smith-Ali, Barna 3, 2010
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, animals -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Denise Smith-Ali, Barna 4, 2010
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, animals -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Djinadara wer Noorn 1, 2009
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, animals, reptiles, plants -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Djinadara wer Noorn 2, 2009
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, animals, reptiles, plants -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Djinadara wer Noorn 3, 2009
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, animals, reptiles, plants -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Djinadara wer Noorn 4, 2009
Language reader.Colour photographs, word lists, CDnoongar, western australia, animals, reptiles, plants -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Kala, 2011
Language reader.Colour illustrations, word listsnoongar, western australia, bunbury, djiti djiti school -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Naatj nidja? = what's this?, 2011
Language reader.Colour illustrations, colour photographs, word listsnoongar, western australia, animals, fish, food, birds -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Naatj nyordo ngany kadak?, 2011
Language reader.Colour illustrations, word listsnoongar, western australia, feelings -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Naatj Boola?, 2011
Language reader.Colour illustrationsnoongar, western australia, numbers, animals -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Conference proceedings, Nigel Crawhill, Creating outsiders : endangered languages, migration and marginalisation : proceedings of the ninth FEL Conference, Stellenbosch, South Africa 18-20 November 2005, 2005
Outward Migration & Endangered Languages; Inward Migration & Endangered Languages; First Peoples; Policy, Power & Endangered Languages; States & Minorities; Migrations in History & Prehistorymaps, b&w photographs, tablesendangered languages, language revival, migration, linguistic diversity -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Kenneth Katzner, The languages of the world, 2002
The major language families of the world are looked at closely. Sample texts of over 200 languages.Tableslanguage families, linguistics, world languages -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Conference proceedings, Joan Argenter, Endangered languages and linguistic rights on the margins of nations : proceedings of the Eighth FEL Conference : Barcelona (Catalonia) Spain 1-3 October 2004, 2005
Section 1: Grass-roots Efforts and Top-down Institutions Keynote Address: Leanne Hinton The Death and Rebirth of Native American Languages Patrick Marlow Bilingual Education, Legislative Intent, and Language Maintenance in Alaska Galina Dyrkheeva New Language Policy and Small Languages in Russia: the Buryat Example Zelealem Leyew The Fate of Endangered Languages in Ethiopia Gregory Hankoni Kamwendo Language Planning from Below: Chitumbuka as a Marginalised Language in Malawi John Hobson Learning to Speak Again: Towards the Provision of Appropriate Training for the Revitalization of Australian Languages in New South Wales Shelley Tulloch Grassroots Desires for Language Planning in Nunavut Amandina C�rdenas Demay Hacia la definici�n de una pol�tica del lenguaje & Alejandra Arellano Mart�nez expl�cita en M�xico Elena Benedicto, G. McLean, Linguistic Rights in the Nicaraguan Atlantic Coast: Grupo de Ling�istas Ind�genas Mayangna Actions on the Ground within the Legislative Framework of the Estatuto de Autonom�a Bartomeu Meli� Las lenguas ind�genas en el Paraguay. Una visi�n desde el Censo 2002 Monica Ward Building from the Bottom-up: Linguistic Rights for Extremely Endangered Languages Marta Moskal Language Policy and Protection of Endangered Languages in Poland Sue Wright What is a language? Some difficulties inherent in language rights Joan Ramon Sol� Obstacles in the Way of the Recovery of Catalan Section 2: The Global vs. the Local in Linguistic Rights Keynote Address: Patxi Goenaga Fronteras que dividen y fronteras que separan. Una mirada a Europa desde el Euskara Yun-Hsuan Kuo Languages, Identity, and Linguistic Rights in Taiwan Estibaliz Amorrortu, Andoni Barre�a, What Do Linguistic Communities Think about the Esti Izagirre, Itziar Idiazabal, Bel�n Uranga Official Recognition of their Languages? Alok Kumar Das Linguistic Practices and Not Just Linguistic Rights: Endangered Languages in New Europe Section 3: Languages crossing the Borders Keynote Address: Tjeerd de Graaf The Status of Endangered Languages in the Border Areas of Japan and Russia Mariana Bara Arm�n endangered language Ver�nica Grondona Language Policy, Linguistic Rights and Language Maintenance in Argentina Grup d?Estudi de Lleng�es Amena�ades Linguistic diversity in Catalonia: towards a model of linguistic revitalization Nataliya Belitser Endangered Languages in Crimea/Ukraine: The Cases of Crimean Tatar, Karait, and Krymchak Ivelina Kazakova & Maria Miteva The Future of Bulgarian: The Road to Extinction or Paradise Regained Luke O?Callaghan War of Words: Language Policy in Post Independence Kazakhstan Eden Naby From Lingua Franca to Endangered Language: The Legal Aspects of the Preservation of Aramaic in Iraq Poster presentations Akim Elnazarov Endangered languages and Education. A Case of Badakhshan Province of Tajikistan Arnfinn Muruvik Vonen & Oddvar Hjulstad Linguistic Rights Paving the Way Towards Language Endangerment? The Case of Norwegian Sign Language Eva Savelsberg Kurdish (Kurmanc�) as Minority Language in the Federal Republic of Germany Jos� Antonio Flores Farf�n Cultural and Linguistic Revitalization, Maintenance and Development in Mexico Mary Jane Norris Assessing the Status, Use and Accessibility of Canada?s Aboriginal Languages within Communities and Cities: Some Proposed Indicators Michael Prosser van der Riet Promotion of Minority Language Scripts in Southwest China. A Relative Success or Complete Failure? Mikael Grut The Endangered Celtic Languages: A Wake-up Call Nariyo Kono Developing Partnerships Between Universities and Language Communities: Top-down and Bottom-up Integration Richard J. Hawkins Probit Modeling Language Attrition Rudy Osiel Camposeco El idioma maya Popti? y la Declaraci�n Universal de los Derechos Ling��sticos Victorio N. Sugbo The literary Response: Claiming Rights in Three Philippin Languages Ya-ling Chang Language Policies in an Aboriginal Primary School in Taiwanmaps, tables, graphsnsw, endangered languages, linguistic rights -
Federation University Art Collection
Sculpture - Artwork, 'The More Bones the Better' by Yhonnie Scarce, 2016
Yhonnie SCARCE (1973- ) Born Woomera, South Australia Language group: Kokatha, Southern desert region and Nukunu, Spencer region Yhonnie Scarce works predominantly in glass. She majored in glass withing a Bachelor of Visual Arts (Honours) course at the South Australian School of Art, Adelaide, and holds a Master of Fine Arts from Monash University. One of the first contemporary Australian artists to explore the political and aesthetic power of glass, Scarce describes her work as ‘politically motivated and emotionally driven’. Scarce’s work often references the on-going effects of colonisation on Aboriginal people, In particular her research focus has explored the impact of the removal and relocation of Aboriginal people from their homelands and the forcible removal of Aboriginal children from their families. (https://thisisnofantasy.com/artist/yhonnie-scarce/, accessed 10 September 2018)Artist's Statement 'The More Bones the Better', 2016 Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera, SA and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Scarce embraces a non traditional approach to glass blowing using glass as more than a mere material, acting as a lens and a mirror, Scarce reflects and exposes the tragedies of Australia’s colonisation. She applies the technical rigours of traditional glass blowing techniques in an innovative and unconventional manner. In particular Scarce uses glass to explore the lives and histories of Aboriginal Australians. Hand blown glass is shaped, engraved, painted and smashed to create indigenous fruits and vegetables such as bush bananas, bush plums and long yams symbolic of her peoples culture and traditions. With their elongated, torso-like shapes, they even evoke human bodies. Akin to a gatherer of bush food Scarce creates glass-gatherings of the persecuted. The repetition of brittle ambiguous bodies collected for experimentation and examination conjures the relentless impact of colonisation and the litany of abuses suffered by Aboriginal people. Within her research Scarce encountered a variety of ethnographic studies examining the use of scientific interventions amongst Indigenous cultures. These include Government sanctioned illegal drug testing of children in orphanages and other dubious medical practices amongst indigenous prison inmates. This work metaphorically looks at these situations and poses questions of what might have gone on in such a laboratory. The judge of the 2017 Guirguis New Art Prize (GNAP), Simon Maidment, Senior Curator, Contemporary Art, National Gallery of Victoria said; “The winning work by Yhonnie Scarce captures the sensitivity to materials she displays throughout her artistic practice. The blown and shattered glass elements are a delicate contrast to the shocking and little discussed histories of Aboriginal exploitation and abuse in the name of science in Australia. Engaging this topic, this work is haunting, in the same way those lived and documented experiences continue to haunt the collective unconscious of this country. Yhonnie Scarce’s work, The More Bones the Better 2016, I believe makes an important contribution to the Collection of Federation University Australia and will engage and move diverse audiences with its technical accomplishment, beauty and message. Yhonnie Scarce was born in Woomera SA and belongs to the Kokatha and Nukunu peoples. Scarce embraces a non-traditional approach to glass blowing using her medium as more than a mere material. Applying the technical rigours of traditional glass blowing in an innovative and unconventional manner, Scarce’s glass objects act as a lens and a mirror to reflect and expose the tragedies of Australia’s colonisation and, in particular, explore the lives and histories of Aboriginal Australians. Hand-blown glass is shaped, engraved, painted and smashed to represent indigenous fruits and vegetables such as bush bananas, bush plums and long yams, symbolic of Scarce’s people’s culture and traditions. While these elongated shapes on the one hand represent fruit and vegetables, gathered and grouped as in the gathering of bush food, Scarce’s torso-like bodies and forms are glass ‘gatherings’ representative of the gathering of people. Here, the many brittle bodies act as a metaphor for the collection, experimentation and examinations undertaken by government authorities on Aboriginal communities researched by Scarce. Exposing a variety of ethnographic studies, examining the use of scientific interventions on Indigenous cultures, Scarce also revealed Government sanctioned illegal drug testing of children in orphanages and other dubious medical practices undertaken on indigenous prison inmates. Scarce’s gatherings also reflect the impact of colonisation and the relentless conjuring and litany of abuses suffered by Aboriginal people. The More Bones the Better metaphorically looks at these situations and poses questions of what was undertaken and investigated in these laboratories. guirguis new art prize, yhonnie scarce, glass, aboriginal -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Article, Petition Queen on Ayers Rock; Coombs stamp on plan for Aborigines, 14/09/1985
A new organization, One Australia Movement, led by the Aboriginal pastor, Rev Cedric Jacobs, wants to petition the Queen to stop handover of Ayers Rock to the Aborigines.A new organization, One Australia Movement, led by the Aboriginal pastor, Rev Cedric Jacobs, wants to petition the Queen to stop handover of Ayers Rock to the Aborigines. Article2. The Federal Government is considering proposals for an organization to replace the defunct National Aboriginal Congress. Changes would reflect the thrust of recommendations by Dr H.C.'Nugget' Coombs who headed an enquiry into the N.A.C.A new organization, One Australia Movement, led by the Aboriginal pastor, Rev Cedric Jacobs, wants to petition the Queen to stop handover of Ayers Rock to the Aborigines. aborigines, ayers rock, one australia movement, jacobs, cedric (rev), holding, clive, coombs, h. c. (dr), national aboriginal congress