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This module focuses on activities rather than information, but the points included below should help you prepare your classroom discussion.
Australia is an entire continent, and its original peoples have lived there for tens of thousands of years. Talking about Australian Aboriginal culture is therefore like talking about "Asian" or "European" or "American Indian" culture. Yes, there are many similarities (just as the cultures of Germany and Italy share some similarities), but there are also differences between groups from different places. (If you have time, you can include a class discussion listing some similarities and differences between two cultures that the students are familiar with.)
Australian Aborigines see the world very differently from Westerners. Even fundamental concepts such as reality and history are viewed differently. Westerners, for example, tend to equate "reality" with "what we can see and hear and touch", and a cause-and-effect "history" of events. Aboriginal understanding - and many of their stories - center around the concept of The Dreaming . The term applies to an early creation period, when totemic ancestors such as Kangaroo, Shark, and Honey Ant, roamed across the landscape creating sacred sites and other important places. This creation time is sometimes called Dream Time . But The Dreaming is not considered to be something that is in the past and done. The term also refers to a "time outside of time", in which past, present, and future coexist, and which Aborigines consider to be more real than the forward-flowing time (both the time and the "touchable" things that we experience) that Westerners consider to be reality. Personal and group connections to The Dreaming are therefore a very important part of Aboriginal religious, ethical, and cultural traditions. If the students are sufficiently mature and it is appropriate, you may want to include a class discussion of concepts that seem very real to the students even though they aren't "touchable" in a physical sense: God and angels? Justice and equality? Love? Ask the students for examples of how these "realities" affect or interact with the physical world. Or discuss familiar "realities" that go beyond, or are more powerful than, the parts of them that you can touch (family, church, nation, school, team, ethnic group, are some possibilities).
Most traditional Aboriginal music, dance, and art is strongly connected to The Dreaming. Because it is an expression of powerful and deep personal, group, and cultural connections to reality, it is sometimes considered "secret" or "sacred" information not to be shared with outsiders, and even "public" art, music, and stories are often considered to be owned by a specific group. You may wish to lead a discussion of the treatment of sacred rites and/or of copyright-type ownership rules in various cultures. If you are doing the entire Aboriginal Australian Music and Story unit, you will want to include information on the connections between The Dreaming, storytelling, and music. Many groups, for example, use songs to tell the stories of Dream Time. In some central Australian groups, the songs are arranged in series; sometimes hundreds of short songs may be in a single song series. Each series follows a songline , which is the path that one of the creative ancestors followed, and the series is always supposed to be sung in the correct order as it follows the ancestor's movements. The songs, which follow the creative exploits of totemic ancestors (such as Kangaroo, Shark, and Honey Ant), are so specific that you could travel across the Australian landscape following a songline. Men play clap sticks and women use body percussion to accompany the group singing that retells these stories. In some groups, a didjeridu may also accompany the singing.
Traditional stories often include very specific information about where the story happened. This emphasizes the strong ties between a people and their traditional lands.
Traditional storytellers often use gesture and sound to mimic the things they are describing. This is good storytelling technique that is found in many places with a strong oral storytelling tradition.
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