Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- NOTE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER II SOCIAL ORGANISATION AND MARRIAGE REGULATIONS
- CHAPTER III INITIATION CEREMONIES
- CHAPTER IV TOTEMIC SYSTEMS AND TOTEM GROUPS
- CHAPTER V SACRED STICKS, BULL-ROARERS, AND CEREMONIAL OBJECTS
- CHAPTER VI BURIAL AND MOURNING CEREMONIES
- CHAPTER VII MAGIC AND MEDICINE
- CHAPTER VIII BELIEFS IN REGARD TO THE ORIGIN OF CHILDREN
- CHAPTER IX TRADITIONS CONCERNING IMBEROMBERA, THE GREAT ANCESTOR, AND ALSO OTHER ANCESTORS OF THE KAKADU NATION
- CHAPTER X VARIOUS TRADITIONS, CUSTOMS, AND BELIEFS
- CHAPTER XI FOOD RESTRICTIONS
- CHAPTER XII WEAPONS AND IMPLEMENTS
- CHAPTER XIII CLOTHING AND ORNAMENT
- CHAPTER XIV DECORATIVE ART
- APPENDIX
- GLOSSARY OF NATIVE TERMS
- INDEX
- Plate section
- Plate section
CHAPTER XI - FOOD RESTRICTIONS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- NOTE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER II SOCIAL ORGANISATION AND MARRIAGE REGULATIONS
- CHAPTER III INITIATION CEREMONIES
- CHAPTER IV TOTEMIC SYSTEMS AND TOTEM GROUPS
- CHAPTER V SACRED STICKS, BULL-ROARERS, AND CEREMONIAL OBJECTS
- CHAPTER VI BURIAL AND MOURNING CEREMONIES
- CHAPTER VII MAGIC AND MEDICINE
- CHAPTER VIII BELIEFS IN REGARD TO THE ORIGIN OF CHILDREN
- CHAPTER IX TRADITIONS CONCERNING IMBEROMBERA, THE GREAT ANCESTOR, AND ALSO OTHER ANCESTORS OF THE KAKADU NATION
- CHAPTER X VARIOUS TRADITIONS, CUSTOMS, AND BELIEFS
- CHAPTER XI FOOD RESTRICTIONS
- CHAPTER XII WEAPONS AND IMPLEMENTS
- CHAPTER XIII CLOTHING AND ORNAMENT
- CHAPTER XIV DECORATIVE ART
- APPENDIX
- GLOSSARY OF NATIVE TERMS
- INDEX
- Plate section
- Plate section
Summary
In probably all Australian tribes there are, under normal conditions, very definite restrictions in regard to the eating of particular foods by individuals at different ages or under special conditions, such as those attendant, more especially, on child-bearing. In many cases the object of these restrictions is very evidently that of reserving the best food for the elder men and women, but in others it is difficult to assign any adequate reason. In some instances it is quite possible that, for example, a woman, while bearing a child, may once have eaten some special food and have, afterwards, been seriously ill. That, in itself, would be quite enough reason for a restriction to be placed on that particular food in regard to all women in the same condition.
Nothing shows more clearly than these food restrictions do, the way in which the life of a native is hedged in with arbitrary rules that must be obeyed, often at the peril of his life. To the casual onlooker the native may appear to live a perfectly free life; in reality he does nothing of the kind; indeed, very much the reverse.
The following are the restrictions amongst the members of the Kakadu tribe, and they may be taken as fairly typical of all tribes:—
Those of the first series are concerned with boys and young men at various ages.
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- Information
- Native Tribes of the Northern Territory of Australia , pp. 342 - 351Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1914