2002
DOI: 10.1215/00141801-49-4-821
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Smallpox and the Baiame Waganna of Wellington Valley, New South Wales,1829-1840: The Earliest Nativist Movement in Aboriginal Australia

Abstract: Of all the various infections that afflicted Aboriginal people in Australia during the years of first contact with Europeans, smallpox was the most disastrous. The physical and social impacts of the disease are well known. This article considers another effect of the contagion. It is argued that a nativist movement in the form of a waganna (dance ritual) associated with the Wiradjuri spirit Baiame and his adversary Tharrawiirgal was linked to the aftermath of the disease as it was experienced at the settlement… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Two recent religious histories are also discussed in Chapter 3, which address the intellectual and cultural milieu of the Indigenous people of south-east Australia in the colonial period, and which chart the startlingly swift and dynamic ritual response at this time (Swain 1993;Carey & Roberts 2002). By its nature, a historical narrative is derived from textual sources and is one that does not well breach and traverse the 'far side of the frontier', given the absence of an Indigenous voice in relevant texts (cf.…”
Section: Structure Of Bookmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two recent religious histories are also discussed in Chapter 3, which address the intellectual and cultural milieu of the Indigenous people of south-east Australia in the colonial period, and which chart the startlingly swift and dynamic ritual response at this time (Swain 1993;Carey & Roberts 2002). By its nature, a historical narrative is derived from textual sources and is one that does not well breach and traverse the 'far side of the frontier', given the absence of an Indigenous voice in relevant texts (cf.…”
Section: Structure Of Bookmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the early colony of New South Wales, Baiame, an Ancestral being, assumed new powers to protect Wiradjuri people from devastating colonial diseases. In rock paintings Baiame was portrayed as a human‐like figure with large staring eyes, very long arms and a body covered in dots which gave him power over smallpox (Carey & Roberts 2002). Christian missionaries projected utopian qualities on to Ancestral beings.…”
Section: Christianising Indigenous Traditionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet the most devastating cultural impacts of invasive species have been that of introduced diseases, such as influenza, smallpox, syphilis, measles, tuberculosis, scarlet fever and vivax malaria, on millions of Native peoples, producing ‘catastrophic reductions in population and associated social breakdown’ in the Americas (Mitchell 2003, p. 173) and ‘intense cultural disorientation’ in Aboriginal Australia (Carey & Roberts 2002, p. 822). Thousands of cultural groups were radically altered, from the Wiradjuri of New South Wales, who invented new rituals to deal with smallpox epidemics (Carey & Roberts 2002), to the ‘total collapse of village life’ among the Yanomamo of Brazilian Amazonia (Wirsing 1985, p. 311).…”
Section: Biological Invasions and Cultural Landscapesmentioning
confidence: 99%