OLAC Record
oai:www.mpi.nl:1839_00-0000-0000-0008-C478-5

Metadata
Title:Garig reminiscences by Alf Brown: 'the old days'
GAR_w_660613
Yiwarrunj, yinyman, radbiyi lda mali: Iwaidja and Other Endangered Languages of the Cobourg Peninsula (Australia) in their Cultural Context
Contributor:Bernhard (Bernie) Schebeck
Contributor (consultant):Alf Brown
Coverage:Australia
Date:1966-06-13
Description:This session was recorded by linguist Bernhard Schebeck between 13 June and 23 July 1966, at an unknown location which may have been Croker Island, from Alf Brown. It consists entirely of Garig language with no translation or spoken metadata. It has not yet been transcribed, but contains a number of reminiscences about the old days, including material on hunting and fighting, marriage and war, and World War II. It is told in the first person which minimizes the degree of difference from Iwaidja and should be fairly easy to transcribe with the aid of Iwaidja speakers; KM would be particularly suitable to assist. This recording comes from the AIATSIS archive (A6468); Schebeck's original tape code was GA1.
This project documents, in as full a cultural context as is possible, the Iwaidja language of the Cobourg Peninsula, Northern Territory, Australia (Iwaidjan language family, non-Pama-Nyungan), still spoken by around 200 people but under increasing threat from English, as well as recording material from other languages of the region (Marrgu, Ilgar/ Garig, Amurdak and Manangkari) which are all reduced to one or two speakers each. In addition to linguists, the research team will include specialists in ethnomusicology, material culture / archaeology, and social anthropology, and will result in a comprehensive, searchable and browsable sound and video documentation, with Iwaidja transcriptions and subtitles alongside English translations, an Iwaidja dictionary of around 5,000 words, detailed phonetic analysis, and briefer materials on other languages of the area.
This session was recorded by linguist Bernhard Schebeck between 13 June and 23 July 1966, at an unknown location which may have been Croker Island, from Alf Brown. It consists entirely of Garig language with no translation or spoken metadata. It has not yet been transcribed, but contains a number of reminiscences about the old days, including material on hunting and fighting, marriage and war, and World War II. This recording comes from the AIATSIS archive (A6468); Schebeck's original tape code was GA1.
Alf Brown Inyjarurri was a member of the Nganyjaharr clan whose traditional estate encompasses the country around Kulkul (Danger Point) on the northern coast of Cobourg Peninsula. His European name stemmed from his close working association with a man of European descent called Alf Brown (1), who lived and worked in the area for four decades until World War II. Inyjarurri’s skin group was Nawurlany and he was of the Yarriwurrik (kujali ‘fire’) phratry. One of five children, he spoke Garig like his father Wajirr, and Marrku, the language of his mother, Gurnigurni. Inyjarurri had two daughters from three marriages (2) , Mary Yugal (deceased), from Lily Malyurrgi, and Maureen Brown (also known as Mindayal and Munamuna), who is still alive, from Audrey Wunganumala. Although the precise dates of Inyjarurri’s birth and death are unknown, it is likely he was born in the last years of the nineteenth century and died in the 1970s. It was Inyjarurri who taught the Marrku language to Khaki Marrala, a co-author of this publication, who is now one of the last people alive with some knowledge of the language. (1) Alfred Joseph Voules Brown (1868-1955) arrived on the Cobourg Peninsula in 1899. He was appointed as the last customs officer at Bowen Strait, whose task it was to collect duties from Macassan trepangers. He soon started his own trepang operations at Bowen Strait, Port Essington and later Blue Mud Bay. Known locally as ‘The Commandant’, he employed local people in his enterprises and became an integral part of their everyday lives. Around 1909, he married Mumulaj, the daughter of a Macassan man and an Iwaidja woman. They had two daughters, Mujerambi and Mulwagug born in 1910 and 1911 respectively. (2) Two of Alf Brown’s wives were sisters, Lily Malyurrgi and Daisy Injarraldaj (also known as Magulagi) of the Majunbalmi clan. His third marriage was to Audrey Wungarumala of the Danek clan.
Format:audio/x-wav
Identifier:oai:www.mpi.nl:1839_00-0000-0000-0008-C478-5
IW
Publisher:Nicholas Evans
University of Melbourne
Subject:Unspecified
Garig-Ilgar language
Subject (ISO639):ilg
Type:audio

OLAC Info

Archive:  The Language Archive at the MPI for Psycholinguistics
Description:  http://www.language-archives.org/archive/www.mpi.nl
GetRecord:  OAI-PMH request for OLAC format
GetRecord:  Pre-generated XML file

OAI Info

OaiIdentifier:  oai:www.mpi.nl:1839_00-0000-0000-0008-C478-5
DateStamp:  2017-02-14
GetRecord:  OAI-PMH request for simple DC format

Search Info

Citation: Alf Brown (consultant); Bernhard (Bernie) Schebeck. 1966-06-13. Nicholas Evans.
Terms: area_Pacific country_AU iso639_ilg

Inferred Metadata

Country: Australia
Area: Pacific


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Up-to-date as of: Wed Apr 12 11:53:55 EDT 2017