MSS141
Aboriginal Australian Dreamtime
Lambert, Intro & select tales;
Tonkinson, "The Spiritual Imperative"; Lawlor, "Time and Space in the
Dreaming"; "The Ontology of the Dreamtime (p. 264- 275)
Reading Questions:
1. What is the Dreamtime? How does the notion of the Dreamtime
fit
into Australian Aboriginal cosmology?
2. What is totemism?
3. How are the Dreamtime stories relevant to the everyday lives
of
the Aborigines?
4. How do the Aborigines conceive of space and time according to
Lawlor?
5. Explain "The Plant is the Dream of the Seed" (Lawlor, 38).
6. What do the terms "yuti" and "mularrpa" mean? What is the
relationship
between yuti/mularrpa and the Dreamtime?
7. What does it mean that there is no word for "fiction,"
"fantasy"
or "personal imagination" in any of the hundreds of Aboriginal
Australian
languages (Lawlor 267)? What does this indicate about the
Aboriginal
mindset and/or world view?
8. What lessons are drawn from the three stories transcribed by
Parker
("Sturt's Desert Pea," "Murgah, Muggui" and "Bralgah the Dancing
Bird")?
What do these stories tell us about the Dreamtime? What are
your
own reactions to these stories?