Bill Gammage Workshop Launch – Seeing History, and the Land, Anew (NB: Altered Venue)
Posted on 3 February, 2015 by Connecting Country
We’ve had a great deal of interest in the presentation by Prof. Bill Gammage that will launch Connecting Country’s Workshop Program on Sunday 22 February 2015 (Note venue change to Campbells Creek Community Centre – but still starting at 4pm). Even though Bill’s publication ‘The Biggest Estate on Earth: How Aborigines Made Australia” was published four years ago, it’s still continuing to create interest, debate, discussion, criticism, and applause. This is your chance to hear from Bill first hand.
Bill is a much awarded academic who has spent over a decade researching ‘The Biggest Estate’. We welcome the opportunity that Bill’s talk gives Connecting Country and the wider community, to look at our local landscapes through an historical lens, to consider another view, and to generate discussion about our landscape and our connections with it. We also hope that others who would not normally come to our talks and workshops might come along to find out more about what we do.
Bill’s book is broad in scope and context, taking a whole-of-continent approach and challenges the conventional history. Bill argues that aboriginal people managed the land with much more complexity than the colonialists and historians recognise/d and we should look more closely to it, and to indigenous knowledge and history, for clues and guidance. This level of complex, ongoing (over thousands of years) indigenous knowledge meant that the land was managed in ways quite specific to the local situation and topography, yet it linked to the broader landscape.
Much of the conversation of late has focussed on the burning question of burning. Bill’s book talks about the ways in which Australians up until 1788 managed the land through fire, and how in the subsequent 200 plus years, much of this intricate knowledge – of specific plant types and species, of landscapes – and the understanding of various fire regimes has been lost, and the lasting evidence is neither seen nor appreciated in that context.
The issue is perhaps not about the finer detail of ‘burning the bush’, but in seeing anew our landscapes and whether we are able to really understand them and also the implications of our management actions. Bill asserts that Aboriginals before 1788 had a clear objective in land management – ensuring food, survival, sustainability – and used their knowledge of plants and animals to achieve it.
The other main aim for the event is to launch our 2015 Workshop Program, “Working with Nature to improve your Property”. We are gathering together another fantastic array of presenters, practical topics and properties from across the region and hope to address some of the questions that Bill’s book raises: How does one ‘read’ a landscape? Or interpret the cultural/settlement history of one? How much do you know and understand about the plants and animals on your own property? What’s your objective for your land? And we’ll also look more closely at the burning question with fire ecologists and CFA experts.
More information and registration forms for the remainder of the Workshop Program will be available at the launch, or you can download them HERE: Please note that places are limited and we have a preference for participants who are managing properties of acreage (>4 ha). Contact Janet@connectingcountry.org.au or 5472 1594 for further details, or to book for the launch. Please note the Venue Change – to the Campbells Creek Community Centre, on Elizabeth St in Campbells Creek.
Attention: Janet
Please book two seats, for the Bill Gammage lecture, Sunday 22 Febuary, Campbell’s Creek Community Centre,@4pm.
Regards,
Neil Webster.
54762263
The event starts at 4pm. (See poster at the end of the post for full details)