Yanyuwa people

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The Yanyuwa people are an Aboriginal Australian people of the Northern Territory. who live in the coastal region inclusive of and opposite to the Sir Edward Pellew Group of Islands in the southern Gulf of Carpentaria.

Contents

Country

In Norman Tindale's estimation, the Yanyuwa had roughly 16,000 km2 (6,300 sq mi) of tribal lands, encompassing the McArthur River from near Borroloola as far as the coast, and running southeast along the coast to the other sided of Tully Inlet. They were also present at Pungalina. Offshore, perhaps excluding Vanderlin Island though contemporary Yanyuwa insist they were Indigenous also to that area, they also lived and fished on the Sir Edward Pellew Islands. [1]

The Yanyuwa lived east of the Wilingura. On their southern flank were the Binbinga people. In the Yanyuwa language there are some 1,500 placenames marking out the distinctive features of the territory they once inhabited. [2]

History

The Yanyuwa traded with the trepangers from the port of Makassar in Sulawesi, who had begun to explore the area of the Gulf of Carpentaria since the 1720s. The trade cycle was based on sailing south with the north westerlies that began to blow in December and then returning under the south easterlies blowing up from April. Trade relations with the Sulawesi were excellent. Yanyuwa people are known to have sailed back on the Sulawesi fleet of praus to stay over for months at Makasser. They, like many other Gulf peoples, adopted Makaser as a lingua franca, whose vocabulary left traces in many of the Aboriginal gulf languages. [3]

Language

The Yanyuwa language has been classified as one of the Ngarna languages of the larger Pama–Nyungan language family.

Many Yanyuwa have also been bilingual in the Garrwa language. [4] The retention of their language as with Garrwa has been attributed to the relative disinterest of colonising whites in the lands both of these tribes traditionally inhabited. [5] Taking as his starting point an observation by Edward Sapir concerning the Yahi dialect of Yana, who considered the gendered distinction in language use between Yanna men and women as very rare, or not as pervasive as in this dialect, John Bradley showed that in Yanyuwa, the differentiation was at least as structurally thorough as in Yahi. The gendered linguistic difference between liyi-wulu-wu (speech for men) and liyi nhanawaya-wu (speech for women) affected noun classes, verbs and pronouns, and in their creation stories, this distinction was maintained by male and female spirits. Raised predominantly by the women, boys spoke the women's dialect until initiation, whereupon they were obliged by custom not to speak as if they had breasts and vaginas. [6]

Neighbouring tribes, speakers of Marra, Garrwa and Gurdanji consider Yanyuwa difficult precisely for this gendered difference in grammar, whereas the Yanyuwa, conversely, have no difficulty in mastering the latter languages. [7] Two exceptions exist, in ribald talk, and in certain songline cycles where male figures use female speech, though the reason is not known. [8] Bradley's conclusion is:

The reasons as to why two distinct dialects for female and male speakers developed are lost in time., This feature has however served to make Yanyuwa a language unique within Aboriginal Australia, if not the world. [9]

Social structure

Yanyuwa law divides generations in the following sequence: the li-ambirrijingu (those in front) are the ancestors, fully-fledged in the intricacies of being Yanyuwa. The li-wumbijingu (those in the middle) are constituted by the present generation of elders. Thirdly, there are the li-ngulakaringu (those behind), the young, including those yet to be born. [10] [11]

Alternative names

Notable people

Notes

    Citations

    1. 1 2 Tindale 1974, p. 227.
    2. Bradley & Kearney 2009, p. 474.
    3. Roberts 2005, pp. 3–4.
    4. Mushin 2013, p. 5 n.4.
    5. Lo Bianco & Rhydwen 2001, p. 403.
    6. Bradley 1988, pp. 126–129.
    7. Bradley 1988, pp. 130,133.
    8. Bradley 1988, pp. 132–133.
    9. Bradley 1988, p. 133.
    10. Kearney 2014, p. 111.
    11. Kearney 2012, pp. 165–183.

    Sources

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