Arelhekenhe angkentya = women's talk : poems of Lyapirtneme from Arrernte women in Central Australia.
Publisher: Alice Springs, N.T. : Ptilotus Press, 2020Description: 192 pages ; 22 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780648062936
- 0648062937
- Poems of Lyapirtneme from Arrernte women in Central Australia
- Indigenous Collection
- Literature and stories - Poetry
- Literature and stories - Authors - Poetry
- Culture - Relationship to land
- Indigenous knowledge - Psychology and psychiatry
- Mental health - Wellbeing - Emotional
- Mental health - Wellbeing - Social
- Religion - Spirituality
- Social organisation - Kinship
- Arrernte people C8
- Women -- Poetry
- Women, Aboriginal Australian -- Australia, Central
- Aboriginal Australians -- Poetry
- Poetry, Australian -- 21st century
- Aboriginal Australian poetry
- Aboriginal Australian poetry
- Poésie australienne (aborigène)
- Mparntwe / Alice Springs (South Central NT SF53-14)
- Australian
- 821.4 23
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Jessie Street National Women's Library General Stacks | 821.4 ARE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available for reference in the library and ILL | 68241 |
Arrernte women are constantly stretched across two incongruent worlds. The world of Arrernte language, culture, kinship, country and knowledge systems which they are striving to protect and maintain on a daily basis. The modern world with its ongoing colonisation and relentless pressures. Both of these worlds are captured in the poems" - Penny Drysdale (editor).
Anthology of poems was written by twenty-one Arrernte women from the heart of the continent in Mparntwe Alice Springs around the theme of the NT Writers Festival 2019, Lyapirtneme. 'Lyapirtneme is an Arrernte word that means growing back, returning. It's like if a bushfire went through the land, and all the trees burnt down, and the roots underground are still alive. When the rain comes you see little shoots growing out of the bottom of the tree, growing back again.' â Therese Perrurle Ryder, Arrernte Elder.
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