Smallpox and the Baiame Waganna of Wellington Valley, New South Wales, 1829-1840: The Earliest Nativist Movement in Aboriginal Australia

Title
Smallpox and the Baiame Waganna of Wellington Valley, New South Wales, 1829-1840: The Earliest Nativist Movement in Aboriginal Australia
Publication Date
2002
Author(s)
Carey, HM
Roberts, D
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0599-0528
Email: drobert9@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:drobert9
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Duke University Press
Place of publication
United States of America
DOI
10.1215/00141801-49-4-821
UNE publication id
une:461
Abstract
Of all the various infections that afflicted Aboriginal people in Australia during the years of first contact with Europeans, smallpox was the most disastrous. The physical and social impacts of the disease are well known. This article considers another effect of the contagion. It is argued that a nativist movement in the form of a waganna (dance ritual) associated with the Wiradjuri spirit Baiame and his adversary Tharrawiirgal was linked to the aftermath of the disease as it was experienced at the settlement site of the Wellington Valley of New South Wales (NSW). The discovery of this movement is of considerable significance for an understanding of Aboriginal responses to colonization in southeastern Australia. It is the earliest well-attested nativist movement in Australian ethnohistory.
Link
Citation
Ethnohistory, 49(4), p. 821-869
ISSN
0014-1801
Start page
821
End page
869

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