My
Natives
And I
Daisy Bates
Edited by Peter J. Bridge with an introduction by Bob Reece of Murdoch University
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"There is in the
life of Daisy Bates something of the spirit of service that moved
Florence Nightingale, and something of the spirit of sacrifice that
filled the heart of Father Damien. She would not put it so, for she has
loved her life and made a joy of her labour but it is right that tribute
should be paid. She went out to her Aborigines
in the first years of this century. They
had never known anyone like her. They named her Kabbarli, grandmother.
They would come to her with
the confidence of a child in its mother, yet like creatures from another
world than ours. To us she is Daisy Bates, Commander of the Order of the
British Empire, the most remarkable woman in Australia. To them she is
the magical Kabbarli whose word is love and law.” The Passing of the Aborigines was
one of the most influential books about Australia ever to be published.
Daisy Bates’ record of her lifetime among the Aborigines has been
criticised, however anthropologists, historians, and all those
interested in Aboriginal Australia have begun to realise that her
knowledge cannot be lightly dismissed. In this edition the original 1936
newspaper series has been integrated with the1938 book, giving a wider
view of Daisy Bates and her times. An extensive new introduction
supplies background to Daisy, her associates and her writing. ISBN
085905 313 X 292 pp illustrated, 216mm x 140 mm, section sewn, limp cover, 390grams, $35.00 + POST All Hesperian Press books are printed on quality paper and will not discolour with age. They are section sewn, the pages will not drop out and the binding will not crack. This book is made to last. |
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