Kdo jsou dnešní Austrálci? Pojetí ženství, rodiny a spirituality

The following study discusses contemporary urban Aboriginal culture. It addresses principles of women’s Indigenous Family Care centre in Australia, where the author volunteered, and maintained an ethnographic research. This organisation, Kummara, is based on family care, strengthening of women’s bus...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jana Kulhánková
Format: Article
Language:ces
Published: AntropoWeb 2009-04-01
Series:AntropoWebzin
Subjects:
Online Access:http://antropologie.zcu.cz/webzin/index.php/webzin/article/view/154
id doaj-3507068e98fa48f2a8e24e5f5e8101ef
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3507068e98fa48f2a8e24e5f5e8101ef2020-11-24T22:24:04ZcesAntropoWebAntropoWebzin1801-88072009-04-01513340154Kdo jsou dnešní Austrálci? Pojetí ženství, rodiny a spiritualityJana Kulhánková0Department of General Anthropology, Faculty of Humanities, Charles University in PragueThe following study discusses contemporary urban Aboriginal culture. It addresses principles of women’s Indigenous Family Care centre in Australia, where the author volunteered, and maintained an ethnographic research. This organisation, Kummara, is based on family care, strengthening of women’s business, and reconnecting Aboriginal women to their cultural role. In fact, the Aboriginal women practicing family care and women’s spirituality in Kummara contribute to revitalisation of traditional Indigenous culture. This occurs mainly in education of children and young people (implementing rites of passage and parental programs), and in reconnecting to the traditional role of women in family, community and in spiritual life. In the Aboriginal context of health, the women in Kummara engage in a process of cultural, spiritual and emotional healing. They have adapted their ways of doing this to modern society and have been influenced by different Western and other cultural concepts while still trying to preserve elements of their ‘traditional’ past. By drawing from different cultural notions and contemporary cultural concepts, the process of revitalising leads to by o  means interesting modern notion of Aboriginal culture.http://antropologie.zcu.cz/webzin/index.php/webzin/article/view/154contemporary indigeneitycultural revitalisationwomen and family well-beingeducation of childrenrites of passage
collection DOAJ
language ces
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jana Kulhánková
spellingShingle Jana Kulhánková
Kdo jsou dnešní Austrálci? Pojetí ženství, rodiny a spirituality
AntropoWebzin
contemporary indigeneity
cultural revitalisation
women and family well-being
education of children
rites of passage
author_facet Jana Kulhánková
author_sort Jana Kulhánková
title Kdo jsou dnešní Austrálci? Pojetí ženství, rodiny a spirituality
title_short Kdo jsou dnešní Austrálci? Pojetí ženství, rodiny a spirituality
title_full Kdo jsou dnešní Austrálci? Pojetí ženství, rodiny a spirituality
title_fullStr Kdo jsou dnešní Austrálci? Pojetí ženství, rodiny a spirituality
title_full_unstemmed Kdo jsou dnešní Austrálci? Pojetí ženství, rodiny a spirituality
title_sort kdo jsou dnešní austrálci? pojetí ženství, rodiny a spirituality
publisher AntropoWeb
series AntropoWebzin
issn 1801-8807
publishDate 2009-04-01
description The following study discusses contemporary urban Aboriginal culture. It addresses principles of women’s Indigenous Family Care centre in Australia, where the author volunteered, and maintained an ethnographic research. This organisation, Kummara, is based on family care, strengthening of women’s business, and reconnecting Aboriginal women to their cultural role. In fact, the Aboriginal women practicing family care and women’s spirituality in Kummara contribute to revitalisation of traditional Indigenous culture. This occurs mainly in education of children and young people (implementing rites of passage and parental programs), and in reconnecting to the traditional role of women in family, community and in spiritual life. In the Aboriginal context of health, the women in Kummara engage in a process of cultural, spiritual and emotional healing. They have adapted their ways of doing this to modern society and have been influenced by different Western and other cultural concepts while still trying to preserve elements of their ‘traditional’ past. By drawing from different cultural notions and contemporary cultural concepts, the process of revitalising leads to by o  means interesting modern notion of Aboriginal culture.
topic contemporary indigeneity
cultural revitalisation
women and family well-being
education of children
rites of passage
url http://antropologie.zcu.cz/webzin/index.php/webzin/article/view/154
work_keys_str_mv AT janakulhankova kdojsoudnesniaustralcipojetizenstvirodinyaspirituality
_version_ 1725762515867009024