The Euahlayi Tribe: A Study of Aboriginal Life in Australia
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About This Book
This ethnographic study documents the social organization, rites, and daily life of the Euahlayi people, describing kinship, totems, and the authoritative role of elders and medicine men. It outlines spiritual beliefs including the All Father Byamee, initiation rites such as boorah, witchcraft and healing practices, and women's roles in birth and marriage customs. The work records funerary rites and mourning, star-lore and legends, and practical subsistence: hunting, trapping, foraging, cooking, and material culture like costumes and weapons. Chapters also depict amusements, corroborees, message-sticks, and the training of boys, offering a structured portrait of communal ritual and ordinary activity.
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