Preface
Introduction
Earth Dreaming
Part One - In The Beginning Was The Dreaming
Chapter 1. Images of Our Origins
Chapter 2. Time and Space in the Dreaming
Chapter 3. Dreaming and Creation
Chapter 4. Colonization and the Destruction of the Dreaming
Chapter 5. Revelation, Paradise, and Fall: The Myth of the Golden
Age
Chapter 6. Earth Dying, Earth Reborn
Chapter 7. In The Womb of the Rainbow Serpent
Chapter 8. Seed Dreaming
Part Two - Living The Dreaming
Chapter 9. Coming Into Being
Chapter 10. The Cycles of Initiation
Chapter 11. Aboriginal Sexuality
Chapter 12. Dreamtime and the Sense of Being
Chapter 13. The Aboriginal Kinship System
Chapter 14. Dream, Earth, and Identity
Part Three - Totemism and Animism
Chapter 15. Totem and Society
Chapter 16. Totem and Image
Chapter 17. Hunter-Gatherers and Totemism
Chapter 18. Totem and Mind
Chapter 19. Totem and Animism
Part Four - Death and the Initiations of High Degree
Introduction
Chapter 20. Death - Expanding into the Dreaming
Chapter 21. Death - The Prepared Journey
Chapter 22. Wise Women and Men of High Degree
Chapter 23. Preserving the Seed
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index
Robert Lawlor (1938–2022) was a writer and film producer who lived in Australia and studied aboriginal culture firsthand. His published works include Sacred Geometry: Philosophy and Practice (Thames & Hudson, 1982), Earth Honoring: The New Male Sexuality (Inner Traditions 1991), and the translation of the works of Schwaller de Lubicz and Alain Daniélou.
"A remarkably comprehensive and fascinating account . . . truly
worthwhile."
*Kirkus Reviews*
"This is a compelling work. Lawlor writes clearly, his research is
impeccable, and his dedication to the Australian peoples is made
clear by the donation of the book's profits to aboriginal
organizations."
*Pat Monaghan, Booklist*
"The best of what the Aboriginals have let outsiders know about
their ecological and shamanic practices, origin myths and kinship
rituals, social and spiritual practices. The illustrations are
spectacular, more than 150 color and duotone illustrations include
some of the earliest photographs of Aboriginal people, shown here
for the first time."
*Whole Earth Review*
"Voices of the First Day is a comprehensive and fascinating account
of the aboriginal culture-its mysticism, its spirituality and
initiation, and its family/community orientated lifestyle."
*The Planet*
"Lawlor's consideration of Australian Aboriginal culture's logic,
spirituality and benefits is essential for understanding their
society: it provides not the usual history of Aboriginal heritage;
but a review of their beliefs, psyche and society."
*The Bookwatch*
"Voices of the First Day is a giant step toward retrieval of what
the author calls "archaic" wisdom which has been kept alive in the
pristine Aboriginal traditions."
*Shared Transformation*
"Customs and beliefs of the Australian Aborigines have long
fascinated social scientists. Placing little value on material
possessions or the concept of linear time, the Aborigines possess a
complex social, religious, and ceremonial system focused on
preserving and maintaining their ancestral lands. In the tradition
of armchair anthropologists, Lawlor attempts to enter the
Aboriginal mind, taking as sources early ethnological accounts,
conversations with Aborigines reviving ancestral beliefs, and
insights from his study of ancient religions. He believes the
Aborigines possess an archaic consciousness vital to the survival
of the planet, a view of human life held by ancient hunter-gatherer
societies but lost with the emergence of advanced technology.
Avoiding anthropological jargon, Lawlor presents a survey of
Aboriginal belief and way of life, enhanced by illustrations of
Aboriginal art and early photographs of Aboriginal ceremonies.
Bibliographic sources, though not seen, appear to be extensive.
Recommended for large collections."
*Library Journal (Wednesday, January 01, 1992) Lucille Boone, San
Jose P.L., Cal.*
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