Master of the Ghost Dreaming
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- 5,99 €
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- 5,99 €
Publisher Description
Lost is the way to the skyland. Our souls wander forlornly in the land of ghosts. Our spirits become their play things; our bodies their food, to be ripped apart, and our gnawed bones are scattered. We are in despair; we are sickening unto death; we call to be healed. Anxiously we wait for our mapan, the Master of the Ghost Dreaming to deliver us.
In the first years of the 19th century a small Aboriginal tribe reels under the threat of white invasion of their ancestral lands. Fada, a missionary from London, is attempting to impose a Christian God over their ancient beliefs. Fada and his wife Mada bring with them disease and despair, along with a message of hope - the result of their own Cockney dreaming.
This novel by Mudrooroo, author of the acclaimed Wild Cat Falling, is a story of survival - physical, metaphysical and magical. It is also the story of Jangamuttuk, the custodian of the Ghost Dreaming, and his shamanistic efforts to will his tribe back to its own promised land.
This is the first of the completed quartet known as his Vampyre Novels...
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Mudrooroo, who in 1965 with Wild Cat Falling (under the name Colin Johnson) became the first Aboriginal writer to have a novel published in Australia, now offers a coruscatingly brilliant vision of life among that nation's indigenous peoples shortly after white colonization. Jangamuttuk is an aging Aborigine shaman whose people have been relocated to an island off the Australian coast under the control of a former bricklayer turned missionary. Jangamuttuk helps them come to terms with the invaders' presence and, at the same time, offers them a restorative vision of community by entering into ``the dreaming,'' a magical time every bit as real as conventional reality. The author skillfully draws parallels between the culture of the Aborigines and that of Fada and Mada (as the missionary and his wife are known) while at the same time showing the conflict between them. Aboriginal resistance grows, climaxing in a gripping maelstrom in the dream time. After Fada and Mada flee the island, leaving it in the hands of their child, the morose and infantile Sonny, Jangamuttuk and his people escape in a scene that is at once magical and realistic. Alluring and enchanting, the volume will capture readers from its first page. Mudrooroo shows once again that truth may sleep but it never dies.