Limit search to available items
Book Cover
Book
Author Murphy, Catherine.

Title See saw : exploring the balance in rural Australia between Aborigines and Anglo-Europeans using Community Cultural Development (CCD) practice and process / [writer and photographer, Catherine Murphy ; editor, Bronwyn Coleman Sleep ; illustrator, Kunyi June Anne McInerney]
Published Ceduna, S. Aust. : C. Murphy, [1998]
©1998

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 W'PONDS  306.0899915 Mur/Sse  AVAILABLE
Description 72 pages : color illustrations ; 20 x 21 cm
Summary Ceduna community reconciliation through arts project; discusses the value of reconciliation and its meaning; describes the aims and process of the project centred on the see saw as a theme; includes biographies of artists and others involved; exhibition of sculptures
Prior Title Aborigines, Australian - South Australia - Ceduna - Attitudes
Ceduna (S. Aust.) - race relations
Notes "Documentation of a community cultural development/cross-cultural reconciliation project in Ceduna, South Australia 1996 and 1997."
Subtitle on cover: A community model for cross-cultural reconciliation
Subject Aboriginal Australians -- Australia -- Ceduna (S.A.) -- Attitudes.
Aboriginal Australians -- Australia -- Ceduna (S.A.) -- Public opinion.
Aboriginal Australians -- South Australia - Ceduna - Attitudes
Aboriginal Australians -- Australia -- South Australia -- Ceduna -- Attitudes
Aboriginal Australians -- Australia -- South Australia -- Ceduna -- Public opinion
Community arts projects -- South Australia -- Ceduna
Community arts projects -- Australia -- Ceduna (S.A.)
Intercultural communication -- South Australia -- Ceduna
Intercultural communication -- Australia -- Ceduna (S.A.)
Sculpture, Australian -- 20th century -- Exhibitions.
SUBJECT Ceduna (S.A.) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n00093287 -- Race relations. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh00007552
Author McInerney, Kunyi June Anne.
Sleep, Bronwyn Coleman.
LC no. 99487711
ISBN 0646361880
Other Titles See saw : a community model for cross-cultural reconciliation