Walking the Thylacine: Records of Indigenous Companion Animals in Australian Narrative and Photographic History

Title
Walking the Thylacine: Records of Indigenous Companion Animals in Australian Narrative and Photographic History
Publication Date
2016
Author(s)
Philip, Justine Mary
Garden, Don
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Brill
Place of publication
United Kingdom
DOI
10.1163/15685306-12341386
UNE publication id
une:19239
Abstract
This report examines the history and significance of indigenous companion animals within traditional Aboriginal society and in early Euro-Australian settlements. Working from historical photographic and anthropological records, the project constructs a visual and written record of these often-transient human-animal relationships, including cockatoos who spoke in Aboriginal language; companion brolgas; and the traditions of raising the young of cassowary, emu, and dingo. It explores different pathways towards shared human and nonhuman animal spaces and how they found common ground outside of a contemporary model of domestication.
Link
Citation
Society and Animals, 24(1), p. 34-62
ISSN
1568-5306
1063-1119
Start page
34
End page
62

Files:

NameSizeformatDescriptionLink