Swan Song of the Arunta explained

Swan Song of the Arunta is a 1952 Australian radio feature by William Hatfield based on Hatfield's book Desert Saga.[1] [2]

Desert Saga

Hatfield's book Desert Saga was published in 1933.[3] [4]

The Age said " It is obvious that he has studied the Australian aborigines, and that in presenting their customs, habits and mentality, in tho form of a story, he has adhered to truth."[5]

The Brisbane Telegraph called it " complete and unflattering picture, touchingly sympatheticto the black fellow, ruthlessly scathing to the white invader."[6]

Premise

"From the point of view of the corroboree-maker, Grungunja, Hatfield presents a sympathetic picture of the effects of white settlement on the aboriginals. There are clashes with early gold-seekers; killings and savage retaliation. Natives released after long imprisonment find their old hunting-grounds disturbed and are driven to spear cattle. Missionaries intervene. Eventually anthropologists take a hand, seeking to reconcile Stone Age lore with the white man’s culture."

Notes and References

  1. News: Radio script by Hatfield this Friday . Tribune . 728 . New South Wales, Australia . 20 February 1952 . 8 March 2024 . 6 . National Library of Australia.
  2. News: Worth hearing . . 23,322 . Victoria, Australia . 22 February 1952 . 8 March 2024 . 10 . National Library of Australia.
  3. News: Black and White . . 1667 . New South Wales, Australia . 22 November 1933 . 8 March 2024 . 16 . National Library of Australia.
  4. News: Black and White. . . 50 . 15,002 . Western Australia . 21 July 1934 . 8 March 2024 . 7 . National Library of Australia.
  5. News: Recent Fiction. . . 24,495 . Victoria, Australia . 14 October 1933 . 8 March 2024 . 4 . National Library of Australia.
  6. News: Current Literature . The Telegraph . Queensland, Australia . 21 October 1933 . 8 March 2024 . 6 (LAST RACE) . National Library of Australia.