Affiliation:
1. Nulungu Research Institute University of Notre Dame Australia
2. The University of Western Australia, and Nulungu Research Institute University of Notre Dame Australia
3. Nulungu Research Institute University of Notre Dame Australia, and University of New South Wales
Abstract
ABSTRACTVia a three‐person dialogue, we engage with an inquiry posed for this special issue: ‘What questions are ethnographers asking about water in Australia?’ Canvassing such an inquiry led us to being both provoked and provocateurs, in part by following Luci Pangrazio's (2016) discussion about the value of provocation in the social sciences. Turning from provocation as heuristic tool, we then focus on the iconic Mardoowarra, Fitzroy River in Western Australia's northern Kimberley, and Aboriginal people's deep and enduring cultural, environmental and emotional interconnections and responsibilities with such a major water source. Contemplated also is the contemporary importance of inquiring into water‐based questions relating to Australian Indigenous people that might be reconceptualized to become questions about ethnographers and ethnography in the 21st century.
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,Anthropology