Limit search to available items
Book Cover
Book

Title Phone & spear : a yut̲a anthropology / Miyarrka Media, Paul Gurrumuruwuy [and 6 others]
Published London : Goldsmiths Press, [2019]
Cambridge, Massachusetts : The MIT Press
©2019

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  303.48330899915 Gur/Pas  AVAILABLE
Description xxiv, 252 pages : color illustrations, color maps ; 22 cm
Summary Yuta is the Yolngu word for new. Phone & Spear: A Yuta Anthropology is a project inspired by the gloriously cheeky and deeply meaningful audiovisual media made with and circulated by mobile phones by an extended Aboriginal family in northern Australia. Building on a ten-year collaboration by the community-based arts collective Miyarrka Media, the project is an experiment in the anthropology of co-creation. It is a multivoiced portrait of an Indigenous society using mobile phones inventively to affirm connections to kin and country amid the difficult and often devastating circumstances of contemporary remote Aboriginal life. But this is not simply a book about Aboriginal art, mobile phones, and social renewal. If old anthropology understood its task as revealing one world to another, yuta anthropology is concerned with bringing different worlds into relationship. Following Yolngu social aesthetics or what Miyarrka Media translate as "the law of feeling" the book is a relational technology in its own right: an object that combines color, pattern, and story to bring once distant worlds into new sensuously mediated connections
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 247-252)
Subject Aboriginal Australians -- Social life and customs
Cell phones -- Social aspects -- Australia
Cell phone users -- Australia
Author Gurrumuruwuy, Paul, author
Miyarrka Media, related corporate body
LC no. be2019047494
ISBN 9781912685189
1912685183
Other Titles Phone and spear