Hearing histories of the western Pilbara: An interdisciplinary study of Indigenous songs composed in the Pilbara region of Western Australia in the twentieth century and technologies to sustain them into the future

Start date
End date
Research partner(s)
University of Melbourne
Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies (AIATSIS)
Australian Research Council

This project aims to investigate Indigenous song traditions of the western Pilbara through current practice and legacy recordings.

It aims to show how public song traditions were used through the twentieth century as tools to manage environmental change.

By recording and documenting songs and histories, and curating and developing an online collection of song-based digital heritage items with a virtual landscape interface, the project is expected to produce knowledge about the role of digital collections and cultural mapping in supporting the sustainment of endangered song traditions.

It also aims to develop tools for use by communities and researchers to secure legacy, crowd-sourced and newly created records of intangible cultural heritages for the future.

Output(s)

Breathing New Life into Old Songs
Type
Website
Authors
Reuben Brown
Publisher
University of Melbourne
Publication date
Tabi tools for change: approaching the solo public songs of the west Pilbara
Type
Journal article
Authors
TRELOYN, S., Dowding, A. M. & Jebb, M.
Publisher
19th Foundation for Endangered Languages
Publication date
Rights notice
Minerva Access is the Institutional Repository of The University of Melbourne