Selected Product: | Wise Women of the Dreamtime: Aboriginal Tales of the Ancestral Powers Paperback Edition: 1st Author: K. Langloh Parker Publisher: Park Street Press Release Date: 1993-07-01 ISBN-10: 0892814772 ISBN-13: 9780892814770 List Price: $14.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Mutant Message Down Under, Tenth Anniversary Edition ISBN-10: 0060723513 ISBN-13: 9780060723514 List Price:$12.95 Mutant Message from Forever : A Novel of Aboriginal Wisdom ISBN-10: 0060930268 ISBN-13: 9780060930264 List Price:$13.00 The Songlines ISBN-10: 0140094296 ISBN-13: 9780140094299 List Price:$16.00 Dreamkeepers: A Spirit-Journey into Aboriginal Australia ISBN-10: 0060925809 ISBN-13: 9780060925802 List Price:$17.00 Voices of the First Day: Awakening in the Aboriginal Dreamtime (Inner Traditions) ISBN-10: 0892813555 ISBN-13: 9780892813551 List Price:$29.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Wise Women of the Dreamtime: Aboriginal Tales of the Ancestral Powers by K. Langloh Parker (ISBN-10: 0892814772, ISBN-13: 9780892814770). At this time we have not yet written a review for Wise Women of the Dreamtime: Aboriginal Tales of the Ancestral Powers by K. Langloh Parker (ISBN-10: 0892814772, ISBN-13: 9780892814770). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Women's stories from the world's oldest tradition, this collection of Australian Aboriginal myths was compiled at the turn of the century by K. Langloh Parker, one of the first Europeans to realize their significance. Here, women tell of their own ceremonies, relationships, and behavioral codes, bringing into focus the Aboriginal world view, in which humanity and nature exist in balance and harmony. (Inner Traditions International) Aboriginal Stories | Customer Rating: | | I bought this book with the hope of finding something more authentic than some of the more popular books on Australian Aboriginal culture I'd read. Though these stories have been collected, translated and compiled by Anglo Australians, my impression is that the authenticity of these stories has been retained. I do believe my authenticity-meter is pretty accurate. However, I have no authority on the subject, and would love to see a review here from someone who does. In absence of such, I hope my review is helpful to others. Each story is followed by Johanna Lambert's commentary. Lambert draws parallels between concepts in these stories, and myths of other cultures. She also explains the contextual beliefs of Aboriginal people in a way that I found helpful and seems respectful to me. At times the psychoanalytical perspective seems a bit forced when applied to these stories and Aboriginal culture in general. I wonder if psychoanalysis is universal enough to be applicable to something so ancient and whole in and of itself. For the most part, though, I found the analysis helpful, and if you don't, you can just read the stories and skip the analysis which follows. If your exposure to Aboriginal culture from the women's perspective is limited to Lynn Andrews or Marlo Morgan, I highly recommend you read this book. Also a great book for anthropologists and students of shamanism or global spirituality. Or, if you enjoyed "Rabbit-Proof Fence," if you just like to hear about different perspectives than your own or want to understand the various people of the world, this book is for you. Recommended. ~heidimo |
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