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Works Cited

Ammann, Raymond, Verena Keck, and Jrg Wassmann. The Sound Of A Person The Sound Of A
Person: A Music-Cognitive Study In The Finisterre Range In Papua New Guinea. Oceania 83.2
(2013): 63-87. Humanities International Complete. Web. 26 Mar. 2016.
Ammann describes the anthropological, ethnomusicological trip Keck and Wassmann made to
visit the Yupno people in Papua New Guinea. It discusses in great detail what a konggap is, how
and when they are sung and why. It breaks down a konggap into musical notation and describes
the cognitive process behind hearing and memorizing everyones konggap. There are multiple
charts describing the demographics of their village and all of their konggaps which is then used
to create six significant observations of konggap and the Yupno people.
"Australian Aboriginal Dreamtime, Mythology - Crystalinks." Australian Aboriginal Dreamtime,
Mythology - Crystalinks. N.p., n.d. Web. 19 Mar. 2016.
Crowley, Ethel. "Third World Women and the Inadequacies of Western Feminsm." Global Research.
N.p., 8 Mar. 2014. Web. 24 Mar. 2016.
"Dreamtime:Traditional Australian Aboriginal Fire Dance." White Wolf. N.p., n.d. Web. 21 Mar. 2016.
Goddard, Cliff, and Anna Wierzbicka. What Does Jukurrpa (Dreamtime, The Dreaming) Mean? A
Semantic And Conceptual Journey of Discovery. Australian Aboriginal Studies. 2015.1 (2015):
43-65. Academic Search Complete. Web. 21 Mar. 2016.
Goddard presents a study that gives detailed explication for the concept of Jukurrpa or
Dreamtime to a western audience. After explaining his methodology, he breaks down four
different steps up to his final version of the Jukurrpa explication. This is one of the few texts on
Jukurrpa that does not get bogged down in the semantics of Dreamtime stories and sticks to
how it effects and lives in society.
Hapgood, Robert. "The Rights of Playwrights: Performance Theory and American Law." Journal of
Dramatic Theory and Criticism VI.2 (1992): 41-57. Web. 22 Mar. 2016.
Hazard, Andrew. "Yung Warriors Hip Hop Corroboree National Tour." Stash Everything. N.p., 24 Oct.
2012. Web. 21 Mar. 2016.

Hedges, Chris. Global Village Idiots: Americans Are Often Ignorant Of How Others View Us. The
New York Times Book Review 107.50 (2002): Literature Resource Center. Web. 28 Mar. 2016.
Hertsgaard, Mark. The Eagles Shadow: Why America Fascinates and Infuriates the World. 3-4:
Publishers Weekly, 2003. Print. 22 Mar. 2016.
Hirst, John 2006 Sense and nonsense in Australian history, Black Inc. Agenda,
Melbourne.

Hirst, John. Sense and Nonsense in Australian History. N.p. Black Inc. 2006. Print. 19 Mar. 2016.
Hughes, Virginia. "The Point of Pointing." Phenomena The Point of Pointing Comments. National
Geographic, 02 Sept. 2014. Web. 24 Mar. 2016.
Murray-Smith, Joanna. "Joanna Murray-Smith Defends The Female of the Species." The Guardian.
Guardian News and Media, 30 July 2008. Web. 21 Mar. 2016.
Nunez, Rafael. "Contours of Time: Topographic Construals of Past, Present, and Future in the Yupno
Valley of Papua New Guinea." Cognition 124.1 (2012): 25-35. Contours of Time: Topographic
Construals of Past, Present, and Future in the Yupno Valley of Papua New Guinea. ELSEVIER,
4 Mar. 2012. Web. 21 Mar. 2016.
Prentis, Malcolm. Concise Companion to Aboriginal History. N.p.: Rosenberg, 2011. JMU E-library. 4
Jan. 2011. Web. 21 Mar. 2016.
Prentis sets out to write a book to be used as a reference guide for teachers in
Australia who need to have Aboriginal history in their curriculum. The first majority
of the book is a dictionary of aboriginal terms, people and events with hefty
definitions. After this it has a timeline from 60,000 years BP until 2009. I used this
source to define any and all aboriginal terms I had trouble grasping throughout the
project.

Rose, David. Phylogenesis Of The Dreamtime. Linguistics & The Human Sciences 8.3 (2013) 335359. Communication & Mass Media Complete. Web. 21 Mar. 2016.
Rose sets out to describe possible correlations between phases in the development of the
aboriginal language and phases in the archeological record of the people on the continent. He
uses a technique to compare Australian language groups and correlates it with a historical
account of the phases of expansion to describe how and when the language split. While he

explains the differences in language based on Dreamtime stories, one other interesting tangent
Rose sets out on is, the notion that the Australians share myths (or very similar versions of the
same story) with other ancient civilizations.
Ross, Valerie. "For an Isolated Tribe, Time Follows the Terrain, and the Future Is Uphill 80beats." 80beats. Discover, 01 June 2012. Web. 21 Mar. 2016.
Stanner, W.E.H. The Dreaming and Other Essays. N.p. Black Inc. 2011. Print. 15 Mar. 2016.
Tripney, Natasha. "Should Feminists Care about The Female of the Species?" The Guardian. Guardian
News and Media, 22 July 2008. Web. 21 Mar. 2016.
Vine, David. The United States Probably Has More Foreign Military Bases Than Any Other People,
Nation, or Empire in History. The Nation. N.p, 14 Sept. 2015. Web. 28 Mar. 2016

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