Indigenous and Minority Placenames: Australian

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Indigenous and Minority Placenames: Australian Indigenous and Minority Placenames Aboriginal History Incorporated Aboriginal History Inc. is a part of the Australian Centre for Indigenous History, Research School of Social Sciences, The Australian National University, and gratefully acknowledges the support of the School of History and the National Centre for Indigenous Studies, The Australian National University. Aboriginal History Inc. is administered by an Editorial Board which is responsible for all unsigned material. Views and opinions expressed by the author are not necessarily shared by Board members. Contacting Aboriginal History All correspondence should be addressed to the Editors, Aboriginal History Inc., ACIH, School of History, RSSS, 9 Fellows Road (Coombs Building), Acton, ANU, 2601, or [email protected]. WARNING: Readers are notified that this publication may contain names or images of deceased persons. Indigenous and Minority Placenames Australian and International Perspectives Edited by Ian D. Clark, Luise Hercus and Laura Kostanski Published by ANU Press and Aboriginal History Inc. The Australian National University Acton ACT 2601, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at http://press.anu.edu.au National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry Author: Clark, Ian D., 1958- author. Title: Indigenous and minority placenames : Australian and international perspectives Ian D. Clark, Luise Hercus and Laura Kostanski. Series: Aboriginal history monograph; ISBN: 9781925021622 (paperback) 9781925021639 (ebook) Subjects: Names, Geographical--Aboriginal Australian. Names, Geographical--Australia. Other Authors/Contributors: Hercus, Luise, author. Kostanski, Laura, author. Dewey Number: 919.4003 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Cover design by Nic Welbourn and layout by ANU Press Printed by Griffin Press This edition © 2014 ANU Press Contents Notes on Contributors . .vii 1 . Introduction: Indigenous and Minority Placenames – Australian and International Perspectives . 1 Ian D. Clark, Luise Hercus, and Laura Kostanski 2 . Comitative placenames in central NSW . 11 David Nash 3. The diminutive suffix dool- in placenames of central north NSW 39 David Nash 4 . Placenames as a guide to language distribution in the Upper Hunter, and the landnám problem in Australian toponomastics . 57 Jim Wafer 5 . Illuminating the cave names of Gundungurra country . 83 Jim Smith 6 . Doing things with toponyms: the pragmatics of placenames in Western Arnhem Land . 97 Murray Garde 7 . Locating Seven Rivers . 123 Fiona Powell 8 . ‘Many were killed from falling over the cliffs’: The naming of Mount Wheeler, Central Queensland . 147 Jonathan Richards 9 . Saltwater Placenames around Mer in the Torres Strait . 163 Nick Piper 10 . Pinning down Kaurna names: Linguistic issues arising in the development of the Kaurna Place Names Database . 187 Rob Amery and Vincent (Jack) Kanya Buckskin 11 . One name for one Place – but it is not always so . 213 Luise Hercus 12 . Why did squatters in colonial Victoria use Indigenous placenames for their sheep stations? . 225 Fred (David) Cahir 13 . Multiple Aboriginal placenames in western and central Victoria 239 Ian D. Clark 14 . Dissonance surrounding the Aboriginal origin of a selection of placenames in Victoria, Australia: Lessons in lexical ambiguity 251 Ian D. Clark 15. Duel-Names: How toponyms (placenames) can represent hegemonic histories and alternative narratives . 273 Laura Kostanski 16 . Water for country, words for water: Indigenous placenames of north-west Victoria and south-west New South Wales . 293 Edward Ryan 17. Obtuse anglers: The linguistics and ethnography of fishing ground names on Norfolk Island . 305 Joshua Nash 18 . Sámi placenames, power relations and representation . 325 Kaisa Rautio Helander 19 . Please adjust your bearings… . 351 Huia Pacey 20 . Accommodating the Inuit majority: Traditional placenames in Nunavut today . 365 Lynn Peplinski 21 . Khoisan indigenous toponymic identity in South Africa . 381 Peter E. Raper Notes on Contributors Dr Rob Amery, University of Adelaide Rob Amery completed a PhD in 1998 at the University of Adelaide (published in August 2000) on Kaurna language reclamation. For the last 25 years he has worked closely with members of the Kaurna community to reclaim their language from historical materials and to develop the language for use in a range of contemporary contexts. In 2002, along with Kaurna Elders, he established Kaurna Warra Pintyanthi (KWP) through which he coordinates a research program into the Kaurna language, including placenames research, and facilitates the development of Kaurna language resources. Through KWP, Rob serves as consultant linguist to Kaurna programs in schools and various community projects and naming activity. In the 1980s he worked in a range of Aboriginal communities in Central Australia, the Top End and Kimberley regions. In 1993– 94 he developed the innovative Australian Indigenous Languages Framework (AILF) for the teaching of Aboriginal languages in senior secondary studies. Vincent (Jack) Kanya Buckskin, Kaurna Warra Pintyanthi, University of Adelaide Vincent, or Jack, as he prefers to be called, is a Kaurna and Narrunga man. Jack began working on Kaurna language projects at the University of Adelaide including the Southern Kaurna Placenames, Kaurna in the Public Arena, Kaurna Learners’ Guide and Kaurna Phonology projects. Jack began teaching Kaurna language at Warriparinga together with Rob Amery through the School of Languages in 2007. He has been the main teacher of Kaurna since then running three evening classes for adults as well as in schools during the day. Jack is a leading member of the Kaurna dance group called Kuma Kaaru and previously danced with Taikurtinna where he integrates Kaurna language into his performances. When not working and performing Jack likes to research and learn more about his culture and the history of his people. In July 2009 Jack was an invited participant at the ‘Young, Gifted and BLAK’ Aboriginal writers’ workshop in Sydney with Alexis Wright. In 2011 he was recognised as SA Young Australian of the Year in recognition of his efforts. In 2013,Buckskin , an hour-long documentary profiling Jack’s re-engagement with his language, was broadcast on ABC TV. vii Indigenous and Minority Placenames Dr David (Fred) Cahir, Federation University Australia Fred Cahir is a senior lecturer in Indigenous Studies and the Australian History Higher Degree by Research program coordinator at Federation University Australia. His research interests include Victorian Aboriginal history and Aboriginal Ecological Knowledge in south-eastern Australia. His latest book publications are: Black Gold: Aboriginal People on the Goldfields of Victoria 1850–1870 (Aboriginal History Inc. and ANU Press) and The Aboriginal Story of Burke and Wills: Forgotten Narratives, co-edited with Ian D. Clark. Professor Ian D. Clark, Federation University Australia Ian D. Clark is a Professor of Tourism in the Faculty of Business, at Federation University Australia. He completed his PhD in Aboriginal Historical Geography at Monash University in 1992. His areas of interest include Victorian Aboriginal history, Indigenous tourism, the history of tourism, and Victorian toponyms. He has been publishing in Victorian Aboriginal history since 1982. Recent works include I.D. Clark and D. Cahir (eds), The Aboriginal Story of Burke and Wills: Forgotten Narratives (CSIRO Publishing, Melbourne, 2013); and I.D. Clark, ‘Prettily situated’ at Mungallook: A History of the Goulburn River Aboriginal Protectorate Station at Murchison, Victoria, 1840–1853 (Ballarat Heritage Services Publishing, Ballarat, 2013). Dr Murray Garde, The Australian National University Murray Garde is a Research Fellow in the School of Culture, History and Language, at The Australian National University. His research interests have largely focused on the ethnography of communication in western and central-north Arnhem Land. Most of this work straddles the disciplines of anthropology and linguistics and is aimed at establishing long–term community-based projects that promote and maintain the use of endangered or minority languages, especially in Western Arnhem Land and on Pentecost Island in north-central Vanuatu. As a result he has paid attention to an eclectic range of cultural domains from kinship reference in everyday conversation, the language of myth and ritual, the language of traditional music (both song texts and metalinguistic aspects), viii Notes on Contributors concepts of health and the human body, the language of interaction with landscapes such as residence, land tenure, landscape burning, geomorphology, ecological zones, ethnobiology, rock art and toponymy. His present interests are community-based language maintenance programs, interpreting, translation and cultural site documentation in Kakadu National Park and the Arnhem Land Plateau. He is also involved in a vernacular literacy and language documentation project with speakers of the Sa language of southern Pentecost Island, Vanuatu. Dr Kaisa Rautio Helander, Sámi allaskuvla, Sámi University College, Norway Kaisa Rautio Helander is Associate Professor of Sámi and Finnish languages at Sámi allaskuvla | Sámi University College in Guovdageaidnu, Norway. She holds a PhD in Sámi language from the University
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