From Sorcery to Laboratory: Pandemics and Yanyuwa Experiences of Viral Vulnerability.

Aboriginal Australia Yanyuwa kincentric pandemics viral vulnerability

Journal

Oceania; a journal devoted to the study of the native peoples of Australia, New Guinea, and the Islands of the Pacific
ISSN: 0029-8077
Titre abrégé: Oceania
Pays: Australia
ID NLM: 0117710

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Mar 2021
Historique:
entrez: 7 7 2021
pubmed: 8 7 2021
medline: 8 7 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The COVID-19 pandemic has prompted renewed attention among health professionals, Aboriginal community leaders, and social scientists to the need for culturally responsive preventative health measures and strategies. This article, a collaborative effort, involving Yanyuwa families from the remote community of Borroloola and two anthropologists with whom Yanyuwa have long associations, tracks the story of pandemics from the perspective of Aboriginal people in the Gulf region of northern Australia. It specifically orients the discussion of the current predicament of 'viral vulnerability' in the wake of COVID-19, relative to other pandemics, including the Hong Kong flu in 1969 and the Spanish flu decades earlier in 1919. This discussion highlights that culturally nuanced and prescribed responses to illness and threat of illness have a long history for Yanyuwa. Yanyuwa cultural repertoires have assisted in the process of making sense of massive change, in the form of past pandemics and the onset of sickness, the threat of illness with COVID-19 and the attribution of 'viral vulnerability' to this remote Aboriginal community. The aim is to centralise Yanyuwa voices in this story, as an important step in growing understandings of Aboriginal knowledge of pandemics and culturally relevant and controlled health responses and strategies for communal well-being.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34230693
doi: 10.1002/ocea.5294
pii: OCEA5294
pmc: PMC8250819
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

64-85

Informations de copyright

© 2021 Oceania Publications.

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Auteurs

Dinah Norman (D)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Jemima Miller (J)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Mavis Timothy (M)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Graham Friday (G)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Leonard Norman (L)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Gloria Friday (G)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Adrianne Friday (A)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Warren Timothy (W)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Joanne Miller (J)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Lettie Norman (L)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Noeleen Raggett (N)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Colleen Charlie (C)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Rhoda Hammer (R)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Marlene Timothy (M)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Peggy Mawson (P)

Borroloola Community Northern Territory Australia.

Amanda Kearney (A)

College of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences, Flinders University.

John Bradley (J)

Monash Indigenous Centre, Monash University.

Classifications MeSH