Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Contents
- ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I THE SPOKEN LANGUAGE OF THE PITTA-PITTA ABORIGINALS: AN ELEMENTARY GRAMMAR
- CHAPTER II TABULAR COMPARISON BETWEEN VARIOUS SELECTED WORDS USED IN THE DIFFERENT ETHNOGRAPHICAL DISTRICTS OF NORTH-WEST-CENTRAL QUEENSLAND
- CHAPTER III SOCIAL AND INDIVIDUAL NOMENCLATURE: CLASS SYSTEMS, &c
- CHAPTER IV THE EXPRESSION OF IDEAS BY MANUAL SIGNS: A SIGN LANGUAGE
- CHAPTER V THE SEARCH FOR FOOD. PITURI
- CHAPTER VI DOMESTIC IMPLEMENTS AND UTENSILS. FIRE-STICKS AND YAM-STICKS. HUTS AND SHELTERS
- CHAPTER VII PERSONAL ORNAMENTATION AND DECORATION. MURAL PAINTING, &C.
- CHAPTER VIII RECREATION: CORROBBOREES, SPORTS, AND GAMES
- CHAPTER IX TRAVEL, TRADE, AND BARTER. THE SO-CALLED LETTER OR MESSAGE-STICK
- CHAPTER X THE MAINTENANCE OF LAW AND ORDER: FIGHTING, FIGHTING WEAPONS
- CHAPTER XI DISEASE, ACCIDENT, DEATH. CANNIBALISM
- CHAPTER XII RAIN-MAKING, THUNDER AND LIGHTNING-MAKING
- CHAPTER XIII ETHNO-PORNOGRAPHY
- INDEX AND GLOSSARY
- Plate section
CHAPTER XIII - ETHNO-PORNOGRAPHY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Contents
- ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAPTER I THE SPOKEN LANGUAGE OF THE PITTA-PITTA ABORIGINALS: AN ELEMENTARY GRAMMAR
- CHAPTER II TABULAR COMPARISON BETWEEN VARIOUS SELECTED WORDS USED IN THE DIFFERENT ETHNOGRAPHICAL DISTRICTS OF NORTH-WEST-CENTRAL QUEENSLAND
- CHAPTER III SOCIAL AND INDIVIDUAL NOMENCLATURE: CLASS SYSTEMS, &c
- CHAPTER IV THE EXPRESSION OF IDEAS BY MANUAL SIGNS: A SIGN LANGUAGE
- CHAPTER V THE SEARCH FOR FOOD. PITURI
- CHAPTER VI DOMESTIC IMPLEMENTS AND UTENSILS. FIRE-STICKS AND YAM-STICKS. HUTS AND SHELTERS
- CHAPTER VII PERSONAL ORNAMENTATION AND DECORATION. MURAL PAINTING, &C.
- CHAPTER VIII RECREATION: CORROBBOREES, SPORTS, AND GAMES
- CHAPTER IX TRAVEL, TRADE, AND BARTER. THE SO-CALLED LETTER OR MESSAGE-STICK
- CHAPTER X THE MAINTENANCE OF LAW AND ORDER: FIGHTING, FIGHTING WEAPONS
- CHAPTER XI DISEASE, ACCIDENT, DEATH. CANNIBALISM
- CHAPTER XII RAIN-MAKING, THUNDER AND LIGHTNING-MAKING
- CHAPTER XIII ETHNO-PORNOGRAPHY
- INDEX AND GLOSSARY
- Plate section
Summary
299. Degrees of Social Rank.—When the individual reaches the full development of puberty, he or she undergoes a ceremony which entitles him or her on its successful completion to a certain social rant or status in the community. As life progresses, other and higher ranks or degrees are progressively attainable for each sex, until the highest and most honourable grade, that enjoyed by an old man, or an old woman, is reached. Special terms—“climanyms”—are applied for each grade or degree (sect. 68), such names varying with each ethnographical district.
There are four social stages for each individual, male or female, to be initiated into, and it may be many years before all these ceremonials and corresponding grades are reached and passed. It is true that the details of procedure taking place at the initiations into the third and fourth degrees are meagre as compared with the first and second, but the aboriginals were always very chary of imparting information concerning these higher grades even to me who had become intimately connected with them through a knowledge of their written and sign languages and other causes. Further difficulties to be reckoned with were the facts that:—with the gradual depletion of the aboriginal population, the initiation ceremonies of the higher ranks are gradually becoming obsolete, those for the females especially being already very marked; that individuals belonging to the higher grades and consequently older people are not too commonly met with; and that no one is allowed to be present or to assist in the initiation of any degree higher than that of which he is himself a member.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1897