2010
DOI: 10.5130/csr.v16i1.1457
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‘Calling our Spirits Home’: Indigenous Cultural Festivals and the Making of a Good Life

Abstract: In a discussion about the problems affecting young people of Cape York, a local community health worker told me: ‘their spirits have wandered too far. We need to call them back to them’.  In the last five years mainstream notions of wellbeing have changed dramatically, but still there is little room for spirits and ancestors. It is now considered that the critical goods of health and wellbeing are leading a life with purpose, having quality connections with others, possessing self-regard and experiencing feeli… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Festivals have the capacity to diversify local economies, improve local networks, and encourage cooperation, while engendering inclusion, celebration, and community (Gibson, Waitt, Walmsley, & Connell, 2010). Not only do cultural festivals facilitate the realization of such benefits for the community, but they also provide an outlet for individuals to regain control of their lives, away from the outside pressures of Western culture (Slater, 2010). According to Salamone (2000) and Ziakas and Costa (2012), festivals generate a feeling of goodwill and community or a such spectacles for the international market, we must be mindful that "we don't erode the reason why we create art in the first place" (p. 1).…”
Section: Indigenous Cultural Festivalsmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…Festivals have the capacity to diversify local economies, improve local networks, and encourage cooperation, while engendering inclusion, celebration, and community (Gibson, Waitt, Walmsley, & Connell, 2010). Not only do cultural festivals facilitate the realization of such benefits for the community, but they also provide an outlet for individuals to regain control of their lives, away from the outside pressures of Western culture (Slater, 2010). According to Salamone (2000) and Ziakas and Costa (2012), festivals generate a feeling of goodwill and community or a such spectacles for the international market, we must be mindful that "we don't erode the reason why we create art in the first place" (p. 1).…”
Section: Indigenous Cultural Festivalsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Travel warnings about PNG can be found on numerous government websites around the globe (e.g., Australia's Smart Traveler website) and travel bloggers have spirit of "communitas" and "are one of the few consistently positive spaces for Indigenous communities to forge and assert a more constructive view of themselves" (Phipps, 2010, p. 217). In fact, in Cape York, Australia, community celebrations and cultural ceremonies are considered highly effective vehicles for improving Aboriginal health and wellbeing (Slater, 2010). Indeed, in Australia there are well over 100 indigenous festivals varying in size and purpose held annually (Phipps & Slater, 2010) and increasingly, health, education, employment, and other well-being services are recognizing the power of cultural festivals in creating a supportive environment to work with indigenous communities in their own terrain towards building better futures (Phipps & Slater, 2010).…”
Section: Tourism In Pngmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander parents are discursively positioned as unable, through a deficit of education, to contribute to the education of their children (2017: 32). Slater (2010) questions the frequent positioning of Indigeneity as deficient or disadvantaged, stating that while such discourses make disadvantage evident to mainstream Australians they also serve to limit and prevent engagement with the lived experience of Indigeneity CDA has also been used to demonstrate the way in which 'new racism' emerges in relation to media narratives about race and crime. Peter Teo begins his 2000 analysis on representations of a Vietnamese gang in Australian newspapers by stating that:…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…36 And Lisa Slater's work in remote Indigenous communities indicates there is little sense that the adults and children at Indigenous cultural festivals feel that they or their practices are valued or prized by 'the mainstream' of the non-Indigenous nation. 37 The case of pathologised indigeneity requiring remediation is different again. 38 The points of articulation between state power, embodied difference and liberal desires are carefully plotted by Tess Lea.…”
Section: Articulated Powermentioning
confidence: 99%