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‘Elegantly written and powerfully argued … The Lamb Enters the Dreaming provides a new way of looking at a crucial aspect of Australian colonial history in a way that is truly original, surprising and profound.’

The judges of the 2008 Prime Minister's Prize for Australian History

The Lamb Enters the Dreaming traces the life of Nathanael Pepper of the Wotjobaluk people, who was born as the first pastoralists were driving cattle and sheep into Victoria’s Wimmera region. In their wake came Christian missionaries, who were just as hostile to the settlers’ violence as they were to the traditional beliefs of Aboriginal people. Nevertheless, Pepper converted to Christianity in 1860. The extraordinary story of Pepper’s conversion, and his subsequent attempts to reconcile the apparently irreconcilable, reveals much about the deeper symbolic and moral forces at work in this collision of cultures.

Robert Kenny challenges many orthodoxies in this profound reconsideration of how indigenous people and Europeans thought about each other. He traces Aboriginal attempts to accommodate the ‘people of the sheep’ and their pastoralist totem, Jesus, while arguing that it was European animals more than the settlers themselves that ruptured the Dreaming. On the European side, Kenny argues, increasingly powerful scientific and philosophical challenges undermined evangelical Christianity’s belief that all humanity was of ‘One Blood’. And behind it all lurked the spectre of slavery and the question of the moral order of imperialism.

Brilliantly original in conception, and written with a rare lucidity and lightness of touch, The Lamb Enters the Dreaming is a detailed and sensitive exploration of a life, a meditation on the matter of culture and conversion, and a major reappraisal of the relations between Aboriginal and European societies in the first decades of contact in southern Australia.

Reviews

‘This is one of the most important books on Aboriginal Australia yet written.’

Robin Osborne, Daily Examiner

‘Robert Kenny enters with tender respect the cruelly ruptured world of the Australians as represented by the Wotjobaluk people … The Lamb Enters the Dreaming has a depth and breadth of reflection that goes well beyond our usual topical histories …

It really is a mystery tour through such matters as translation, language, mission strategy, conversion, totemism, tradition, culture, sorcery, scripture, Darwinianism and evangelicalism.

All this is done with a light touch, always with a sense of ongoing puzzlement and of closure still to come … Take your time. Enjoy the ride.'

Greg Dening, Age

‘[Kenny] shares with Inga Clendinnen a drive to decipher the Aboriginal responses to conquest, recognising that they too were sentient beings with organised moral and spiritual codes.’

Stephen Saunders, Canberra Times
» All reviews for this title

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