MADARRPA
FUNERAL AT GURKA'WUY
87
minutes (Part I: 42 minutes, Part II: 44 minutes) Colour 1979
Film-maker: Ian Dunlop
Anthropologist: Howard Morphy
The way of coping with death
among the Yolngu people of northeast Arnhem Land is through rites
of clan, religion and land. The funeral is for a young child at
an Aboriginal clan homeland settlement on the Gulf of Carpentaria.
At these settlements today, modern technology such as motor trucks,
aeroplanes, and radios are used, but the mortuary rites themselves
are traditional, extremely complex and a living expression of the
people's connection with the land. As a result of life on mission
stations, the Yolngu have made some practical modifications to their
traditional ceremonies. The dead are now buried in coffins; previously
their bodies were temporarily buried or exposed on platforms, then
months or even years later their bones were placed in standing painted
hollow logs. Despite these modifications, traditional ritual remains
extremely strong because Yolngu religion is a living one.
This film gives a very detailed
explanation of the funeral, also explaining kinship structure, religious
belief systems, and current social relationships between the various
related Aboriginal groups. Some of the images of the film are haunting,
particularly the burial itself. This is a film tailor-made for teaching
and is of great value to specialists interested in Australian Aboriginal
mortuary practices. The film is in two parts to fit three-quarter
hour teaching periods. Its value is greatly increased by Howard
Morphy's accompanying monograph, Journey to the Crocodile's Nest. Catalogue number (16mm): 9RA159 £21.
-
H. Morphy, 1984. Journey to the Crocodile's Nest: An Accompanying
Monograph to the Film `Madarrpa Funeral at Gurka'wuy' [with
an afterword by I. Dunlop]. Australian Institute of Aboriginal
Studies, Canberra.
-
J. Reed, 1983. Sorcerers and Healing Spirits: Continuity
and Change in an Aboriginal Medical System. Australian National
University Press, Canberra.
-
W.L. Warner, 1964 (1937).
A Black Civilization:
A Study of an Australian Tribe. Harper and Row, New York.
- N.M.
Williams, 1986. The Yolngu
and Their Land: A System of Land Tenure and the Fight for its
Recognition. Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies, Canberra.
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