Coquitlam Public Library

One Man?s Response

Label
One Man?s Response
Language
eng
Characteristic
videorecording
Main title
One Man?s Response
Oclc number
1035142737
resource.otherEventInformation
Originally produced by National Film and Sound Archive of Australia in 1986
Runtime
52
Summary
This film records the reaction of one clan leader, Narritjin Maymuru, to the coming of the Gove bauxite mine. In mid-1971 Narritjin held a mortuary ceremony at Yirrkala in memory of several relatives. He opened this ceremony to visitors from the mining town, charging them a small entrance fee. Narritjin had two objectives in mind. Firstly, he wanted to raise money so that he could move with his family away from Yirrkala and the mine and set up a small settlement on his own clan land some 150 kilometres to the south. Secondly, Narritjin wanted to promote better understanding of Yolngu culture and the relationship between the Yolngu and their land.. The first part of One Man?s Response focuses on a concert given by Yirrkala school children for the mining community at Nhulunbuy. This contrasts dramatically with the second, and major part of the film, which covers the ceremony organised by Narritjin.. The school concert and the mortuary ceremony highlight the differences between western style performance (for an audience), and Yolngu ceremonial performance. But the theme of communication, or rather non-communication, is central to both events. In a final sequence, Narritjin reflects on the problems resulting from opening the ceremony to non-Indigenous people
Technique
live action
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