10.4225/03/590153b0be412
Jorgensen, Darren
Darren
Jorgensen
Simulating the sacred in Theodore Strehlow's Songs of Central Australia
Monash University
2017
monash:110423
Aboriginal Australia
Hermannsburg Mission
1832-3391
journal article
Australian poetry
Arrernte
Translations of the New Testament
10.2104/bc100022
Songs of Central Australia
Dreaming
Theodore Strehlow
1959.1/788538
2017-04-27 01:30:22
Journal contribution
https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/journal_contribution/Simulating_the_sacred_in_Theodore_Strehlow_s_Songs_of_Central_Australia/4923284
It may be impossible to reconstruct what it meant for the Arrernte people of Central Australia to have the New Testament translated into their language. The continuing practice of Christianity among the Arrernte shows just how powerful this wealth of stories was for this remote community. This act of translation was reversed by the son of the New Testament's Arrernte translator, Theodor Strehlow, who worked on rendering the song-cycles of the Arrernte into English. These are not so much translations as conversions, as Strehlow wrote them into a poetry of rhythm and cadence that was influenced by Greek and Norse myth. In doing so, Strehlow wanted to simulate his own conversion experience, his own experience of this desert people and their lives. To do so he was forced to turn to that which simulates the sacred in Western culture, in the language of poetry and literature. In reading Strehlow's Songs of Central Australia (1971) and the story of its composition, we might begin to approach this conversion to Aboriginalism that took place in the desert of Central Australia, and subsequently reconstruct Strehlow's attempt to reverse religious imperialism.
Copyright 2010 Darren Jorgensen. No part of this article may be reproduced by any means without the written consent of the publisher.