Selected Product: | Dancing With Strangers: Europeans and Australians at First Contact Paperback Author: Inga Clendinnen Publisher: Cambridge University Press Release Date: 2005-06-06 ISBN-10: 0521616816 ISBN-13: 9780521616812 List Price: $24.99 Average Customer Rating: | | Things Fall Apart: A Novel ISBN-10: 0385474547 ISBN-13: 9780385474542 List Price:$10.95 The British Empire: Sunrise to Sunset (Recovering the Past) ISBN-10: 0582472814 ISBN-13: 9780582472815 List Price:$40.00 African Perspectives on Colonialism (The Johns Hopkins Symposia in Comparative History) ISBN-10: 0801839319 ISBN-13: 9780801839313 List Price:$19.95 Edge of Empire: Lives, Culture, and Conquest in the East, 1750-1850 ISBN-10: 1400075467 ISBN-13: 9781400075461 List Price:$15.95 The Social Construction of the Ocean (Cambridge Studies in International Relations) ISBN-10: 0521010578 ISBN-13: 9780521010573 List Price:$37.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Dancing With Strangers: Europeans and Australians at First Contact by Inga Clendinnen (ISBN-10: 0521616816, ISBN-13: 9780521616812). At this time we have not yet written a review for Dancing With Strangers: Europeans and Australians at First Contact by Inga Clendinnen (ISBN-10: 0521616816, ISBN-13: 9780521616812). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com In January 1788, the First Fleet arrived in New South Wales, Australia and a thousand British men and women encountered the people who would be their new neighbors. Dancing with Strangers tells the story of what happened between the first British settlers of Australia and these Aborigines. Inga Clendinnen interprets the earliest written sources, and the reports, letters and journals of the first British settlers in Australia. She reconstructs the difficult path to friendship and conciliation pursued by Arthur Phillip and the local leader 'Bennelong' (Baneelon) that was ultimately destroyed by the assertion of profound cultural differences. A Prize-winning archaeologist, anthropologist and historian of ancient Mexican cultures, Inga Clendinnen has spent most of her teaching career at La Trobe University in Bundoora, Australia. Ambivalent Conquests: Maya and Spaniard in Yucatan (Cambridge, 1989) and Aztecs: An Interpretation (Cambridge, 1995) are two of her best-known scholarly works; Tiger's Eye: A Memoir, (Scribner, 2001) describes her battle against liver cancer. Reading the Holocaust (Cambridge, 2002) explores World War II genocide from various perspectives. `People always look most alike when we know them least' | Customer Rating: | This is a thoughtful, insightful look at the initial contacts between Australia's indigenous people and members of the First Fleet in 1788. There is an intense curiosity, both within this book and in the snippets of evidence from the primary documents Ms Clendinnen refers to, about the meanings of the human interactions observed. Reading through the snippets from Watkin Tench, David Collins, William Bradley and others offers insights into the impacts of foreign cultures on each other.
`Our first shared Australian story is a tragedy of animated imagination, determined friendship and painfully dying hopes.'
One of the tragedies is in the way we view history. Written records, with their framework of events and theories of causation speak for themselves in ways that oral traditions, especially by those dispossessed, often cannot.
At the end of her book, Ms Clendinnen writes: `Here in this place, I think, we are all Australians now.' I am not sure that we are there yet, but there is renewed hope that we can be.
This book is well worth reading for its insights into those initial contacts.
Jennifer Cameron-Smith | Excellent history ! | Customer Rating: | | Inga Clendinnen, one of Australia's most influential historians has written a gripping account of the relationship between the members of the First Fleet and the local "Australians" (as Clendinnen calls the aborigines). She uses the old reports and journals of the crew as source material. The result is a surprising peek at what really went on in those first 5 years, how Governor Arthur Phillip worked to establish friendly contacts, the clash of cultures so different from each other, and what happened to his efforts. Clendinnon is not as academic as she has been with prior works, but neither is this a beach read. It's a serious history book of real merit which also happens to be very well written. |
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