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K. Langloh Parker

Catherine Eliza Somerville Stow (1 May 1856 – 27 March 1940), who wrote as K. Langloh Parker, was a South Australian born writer who lived in northern New South Wales in the late nineteenth century. She is best known for recording the stories of the Ualarai around her. Her testimony is one of the best accounts of the beliefs and stories of an Aboriginal people in north-west New South Wales at that time. However, her accounts reflect European attitudes of the time.

  • K. Langloh Parker
  • Catherine Eliza Somerville Stow[1]
Parker in 1912
Born
Catherine Eliza Somerville Field

(1856-05-01)1 May 1856
Died27 March 1940(1940-03-27) (aged 83)
Spouse(s)Langloh Parker[2] and Percival Randolph Stow
Parent(s)Henry Field (1818–1909)[3] and Sophia née Newland (1829–1872)
RelativesRidgway Newland (grandfather),[4] Randolph Isham Stow (father-in-law)
Writing career
Pen nameK. Langloh Parker
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAustralian
Years active1898-1940
Notable worksAustralian Legendary Tales
Notable awardsChildren's Book of the Year Award: Older Readers 1954
Australian Legendary Tales – folk-lore of the Noongahburrahs as told to the picaninnies (1896), collected by K. Langloh Parker

Early life edit

Parker was born Catherine Eliza Somerville Field at Encounter Bay, in South Australia, daughter of Henry Field, pastoralist, and his wife Sophia, daughter of Rev. Ridgway Newland.[1][5] Henry Field established Marra station near Wilcannia on the Darling River in New South Wales, and 'Katie' was raised there. The relocation brought the family both prosperity and sorrows. In an incident that took place in January 1862, her sisters Jane and Henrietta drowned while Katie was rescued by her Ualarai nurse, Miola. In recognition, Miola was taken in to be schooled together with the Fields' other children.[1][2] The family moved back to Adelaide in 1872.

Marriage edit

In 1875, on reaching her maturity at 18, she married her first husband, Langloh Parker, 16 years her senior. In 1879 they moved to his property, Bangate Station, near Angledool, on Ualarai lands by the Narran River. Langloh Parker's holdings consisted of 215,000 acres (87,000 ha) running some 100,000 sheep and cattle. He found time also to work as magistrate at Walgett.[6] Over the following two decades she collected many of the Ualarai stories and legends which were to fill her books and make her famous.[6] After drought struck the region, the station eventually failed and the Parkers moved to Sydney in 1901, where Langloh was diagnosed with cancer, dying two years later.[6] Katie travelled to England and married a lawyer, Percival Randolph Stow (son of Randolph Isham Stow), in 1905. The couple eventually returned to Australia, taking up residence in the suburb of Glenelg in Adelaide until her death in 1940.

Ethnographical work edit

Katie Parker had a fair degree of fluency in Ualarai. But her scruples over accurate reportage led her to inquire among, and converse with, her informants by adopting a technique to control against errors. She would elicit material on a legend from an elder, then get the English version retranslated back by a native more fluent in English than the elders, in order to enable the latter to correct any errors that might have arisen. The interpreter would then translate the revised version, which she would write down, and then have the written account read back to the elderly informant for final confirmation of its accuracy.[7]

Her first foray in ethnography, Australian Legendary Tales: folklore of the Noongahburrahs as told to the Piccaninnies,[8] appeared in 1896 as one of a series dealing with 'Fairy Tales of the British Empire'.[9] She followed this on two years later with More Australian Legendary Tales.[10] The Scottish writer and anthropologist Andrew Lang had provided prefaces to both works, and it was perhaps on his advice and encouragement that she eventually wrote the classic for which she is best known, The Euahlayi Tribe: A study of Aboriginal life in Australia,[11] which came out in 1905. This, as generally her earlier books, were well received by the relevant scholarly community at the time: reviews commended her direct transmission of what elders had told her, unadorned by imaginative additions.[12]

Reflecting on the use to which her ethnography had been put, she expressed a lively wariness about how aboriginal material can be reworked to fit some modern theory, under the misapprehension that the scholar thereby evinces a 'detachment' from the immediate world of his study's distant subjects, as when she remarked perceptively, as Evans notes, observed that:

I dare say little with an air of finality about black people; I have lived too much with them for that. To be positive, you should never spend more than six months in their neighbourhood; in fact, if you want to keep your anthropological ideas quite firm, it is safer to let the blacks remain in inland Australia while you stay a few thousand miles away. Otherwise, your preconceived notions are almost sure to totter to their foundations; and nothing is more annoying than to have elaborately built-up, delightfully logical theories, played ninepins with by an old greybeard of a black, who apparently objects to his beliefs being classified, docketed, and pigeon-holed, until he has had his say.[13][14]

She concludes by expressing her sympathy with Montaigne's criticism of European man's sense of being more enlightened than savages, when we ourselves boast of laws that putatively reflect nature rather than being themselves the outcome of custom. Missionaries among the Aborigines failed to realize that the natives whom they tried to convert from their 'customs' hewed far more closely to their laws than Christians do, and missionaries were as much victims of their own customs as the native flock among whom they proselytized were of theirs.[13]

Her books nonetheless went out of print, and only in recent decades has her work been retrieved and examined, either critically as embodying the flaws of colonial ethnography, or as an early example of feminist approaches in anthropology.[15]

Other works edit

Parker wrote several other minor works, including a cookery book (Kookaburra Cookery Book, 1911) which proved very popular; Walkabouts of Wur-run-nah(1918) and Woggheeguy: Australian Aboriginal Legends(1930). Her reminiscences of life at Bangate, My Bush Book, was only published posthumously, edited by her biographer, Marcie Muir.[16]

Notes edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d Muir 1990.
  2. ^ a b Evans 2011, p. 15.
  3. ^ Field 1909.
  4. ^ Rendell 1967.
  5. ^ Evans 2011, p. 14.
  6. ^ a b c Evans 2011, p. 16.
  7. ^ Parker & Lang 1898, p. 491.
  8. ^ Parker 1896.
  9. ^ Evans 2011, pp. 17–18.
  10. ^ Parker 1898.
  11. ^ Parker 1905.
  12. ^ Evans 2011, p. 19.
  13. ^ a b Parker 1905, p. 141.
  14. ^ Evans 2011, p. 22.
  15. ^ Evans 2011, pp. 19–21.
  16. ^ Parker & Muir 1982.

Sources edit

  • Evans, Julie (2011). Founders, Firsts and Feminists: Women Leaders in Twentieth-century Australia (PDF). eScholarship Research Centre, University of Melbourne. pp. 13–26.
  • Muir, Marcie (1990). Catherine Eliza (Katie) Stow (1856–1940). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 12. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  • "Obituaries of the Week: Henry Field (1818–1909)". Observer. Vol. LXVI, no. 3, 515. South Australia. 13 February 1909.
  • K. Langloh Parker (1896), Australian Legendary Tales: Folklore of the Noongahburrahs as told to the Piccaninnies, Illustrator: Tommy McRae, Melbourne, London: David Nutt, Wikidata Q21120338
  • K. Langloh Parker (1898), More Australian Legendary Tales, Illustrator: Tommy McRae, London, Melbourne: David Nutt, Wikidata Q21120391
  • K. Langloh Parker (1905), The Euahlayi Tribe: A Study of Aboriginal Life in Australia, London: Archibald Constable, Wikidata Q19086199
  • Parker, K. Langloh; Lang, Andrew (December 1898). "Australian Religion". Folklore. 10 (4): 489–495. JSTOR 1253370.
  • Parker, K. Langloh; Muir, Marcie (1982). My Bush Book: K. Langloh Parker's 1890s Story of Outback Station Life, with Background and Biography. Rigby. ISBN 978-0-727-01734-5.
  • Rendell, Alan (1967). Newland, Ridgway William (1790–1864). Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 2. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.

Further reading edit

  • Wise women of the dreamtime : Aboriginal tales of the ancestral powers. K. Langloh Parker, Johanna Lambert. Rochester, Vt.: Inner Traditions International. 1993. ISBN 0-89281-477-2. OCLC 27430103.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  • Singleton, Jane (2020). What Katie Did: How a white woman in remote Australia notated an Aboriginal language and legends in the 19th century. ISBN 9780648656319.
  • Singleton, Jane (2020). "What Katie Did" (PDF). SL Magazine. 13: 30–33.

External links edit

langloh, parker, catherine, eliza, somerville, stow, 1856, march, 1940, wrote, south, australian, born, writer, lived, northern, south, wales, late, nineteenth, century, best, known, recording, stories, ualarai, around, testimony, best, accounts, beliefs, stor. Catherine Eliza Somerville Stow 1 May 1856 27 March 1940 who wrote as K Langloh Parker was a South Australian born writer who lived in northern New South Wales in the late nineteenth century She is best known for recording the stories of the Ualarai around her Her testimony is one of the best accounts of the beliefs and stories of an Aboriginal people in north west New South Wales at that time However her accounts reflect European attitudes of the time K Langloh ParkerCatherine Eliza Somerville Stow 1 Parker in 1912BornCatherine Eliza Somerville Field 1856 05 01 1 May 1856Encounter Bay South AustraliaDied27 March 1940 1940 03 27 aged 83 Glenelg South Australia 1 Spouse s Langloh Parker 2 and Percival Randolph StowParent s Henry Field 1818 1909 3 and Sophia nee Newland 1829 1872 RelativesRidgway Newland grandfather 4 Randolph Isham Stow father in law Writing careerPen nameK Langloh ParkerLanguageEnglishNationalityAustralianYears active1898 1940Notable worksAustralian Legendary TalesNotable awardsChildren s Book of the Year Award Older Readers 1954Australian Legendary Tales folk lore of the Noongahburrahs as told to the picaninnies 1896 collected by K Langloh Parker Contents 1 Early life 2 Marriage 3 Ethnographical work 4 Other works 5 Notes 5 1 Citations 6 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life editParker was born Catherine Eliza Somerville Field at Encounter Bay in South Australia daughter of Henry Field pastoralist and his wife Sophia daughter of Rev Ridgway Newland 1 5 Henry Field established Marra station near Wilcannia on the Darling River in New South Wales and Katie was raised there The relocation brought the family both prosperity and sorrows In an incident that took place in January 1862 her sisters Jane and Henrietta drowned while Katie was rescued by her Ualarai nurse Miola In recognition Miola was taken in to be schooled together with the Fields other children 1 2 The family moved back to Adelaide in 1872 Marriage editIn 1875 on reaching her maturity at 18 she married her first husband Langloh Parker 16 years her senior In 1879 they moved to his property Bangate Station near Angledool on Ualarai lands by the Narran River Langloh Parker s holdings consisted of 215 000 acres 87 000 ha running some 100 000 sheep and cattle He found time also to work as magistrate at Walgett 6 Over the following two decades she collected many of the Ualarai stories and legends which were to fill her books and make her famous 6 After drought struck the region the station eventually failed and the Parkers moved to Sydney in 1901 where Langloh was diagnosed with cancer dying two years later 6 Katie travelled to England and married a lawyer Percival Randolph Stow son of Randolph Isham Stow in 1905 The couple eventually returned to Australia taking up residence in the suburb of Glenelg in Adelaide until her death in 1940 Ethnographical work editKatie Parker had a fair degree of fluency in Ualarai But her scruples over accurate reportage led her to inquire among and converse with her informants by adopting a technique to control against errors She would elicit material on a legend from an elder then get the English version retranslated back by a native more fluent in English than the elders in order to enable the latter to correct any errors that might have arisen The interpreter would then translate the revised version which she would write down and then have the written account read back to the elderly informant for final confirmation of its accuracy 7 Her first foray in ethnography Australian Legendary Tales folklore of the Noongahburrahs as told to the Piccaninnies 8 appeared in 1896 as one of a series dealing with Fairy Tales of the British Empire 9 She followed this on two years later with More Australian Legendary Tales 10 The Scottish writer and anthropologist Andrew Lang had provided prefaces to both works and it was perhaps on his advice and encouragement that she eventually wrote the classic for which she is best known The Euahlayi Tribe A study of Aboriginal life in Australia 11 which came out in 1905 This as generally her earlier books were well received by the relevant scholarly community at the time reviews commended her direct transmission of what elders had told her unadorned by imaginative additions 12 Reflecting on the use to which her ethnography had been put she expressed a lively wariness about how aboriginal material can be reworked to fit some modern theory under the misapprehension that the scholar thereby evinces a detachment from the immediate world of his study s distant subjects as when she remarked perceptively as Evans notes observed that I dare say little with an air of finality about black people I have lived too much with them for that To be positive you should never spend more than six months in their neighbourhood in fact if you want to keep your anthropological ideas quite firm it is safer to let the blacks remain in inland Australia while you stay a few thousand miles away Otherwise your preconceived notions are almost sure to totter to their foundations and nothing is more annoying than to have elaborately built up delightfully logical theories played ninepins with by an old greybeard of a black who apparently objects to his beliefs being classified docketed and pigeon holed until he has had his say 13 14 She concludes by expressing her sympathy with Montaigne s criticism of European man s sense of being more enlightened than savages when we ourselves boast of laws that putatively reflect nature rather than being themselves the outcome of custom Missionaries among the Aborigines failed to realize that the natives whom they tried to convert from their customs hewed far more closely to their laws than Christians do and missionaries were as much victims of their own customs as the native flock among whom they proselytized were of theirs 13 Her books nonetheless went out of print and only in recent decades has her work been retrieved and examined either critically as embodying the flaws of colonial ethnography or as an early example of feminist approaches in anthropology 15 Other works editParker wrote several other minor works including a cookery book Kookaburra Cookery Book 1911 which proved very popular Walkabouts of Wur run nah 1918 and Woggheeguy Australian Aboriginal Legends 1930 Her reminiscences of life at Bangate My Bush Book was only published posthumously edited by her biographer Marcie Muir 16 Notes editCitations edit a b c d Muir 1990 a b Evans 2011 p 15 Field 1909 Rendell 1967 Evans 2011 p 14 a b c Evans 2011 p 16 Parker amp Lang 1898 p 491 Parker 1896 Evans 2011 pp 17 18 Parker 1898 Parker 1905 Evans 2011 p 19 a b Parker 1905 p 141 Evans 2011 p 22 Evans 2011 pp 19 21 Parker amp Muir 1982 Sources editEvans Julie 2011 Founders Firsts and Feminists Women Leaders in Twentieth century Australia PDF eScholarship Research Centre University of Melbourne pp 13 26 Muir Marcie 1990 Catherine Eliza Katie Stow 1856 1940 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 12 National Centre of Biography Australian National University Obituaries of the Week Henry Field 1818 1909 Observer Vol LXVI no 3 515 South Australia 13 February 1909 K Langloh Parker 1896 Australian Legendary Tales Folklore of the Noongahburrahs as told to the Piccaninnies Illustrator Tommy McRae Melbourne London David Nutt Wikidata Q21120338 K Langloh Parker 1898 More Australian Legendary Tales Illustrator Tommy McRae London Melbourne David Nutt Wikidata Q21120391 K Langloh Parker 1905 The Euahlayi Tribe A Study of Aboriginal Life in Australia London Archibald Constable Wikidata Q19086199 Parker K Langloh Lang Andrew December 1898 Australian Religion Folklore 10 4 489 495 JSTOR 1253370 Parker K Langloh Muir Marcie 1982 My Bush Book K Langloh Parker s 1890s Story of Outback Station Life with Background and Biography Rigby ISBN 978 0 727 01734 5 Rendell Alan 1967 Newland Ridgway William 1790 1864 Australian Dictionary of Biography Vol 2 National Centre of Biography Australian National University Further reading editWise women of the dreamtime Aboriginal tales of the ancestral powers K Langloh Parker Johanna Lambert Rochester Vt Inner Traditions International 1993 ISBN 0 89281 477 2 OCLC 27430103 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Singleton Jane 2020 What Katie Did How a white woman in remote Australia notated an Aboriginal language and legends in the 19th century ISBN 9780648656319 Singleton Jane 2020 What Katie Did PDF SL Magazine 13 30 33 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about K Langloh Parker nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to K Langloh Parker Works by K Langloh Parker at Project Gutenberg Works by or about K Langloh Parker at Internet Archive Works by K Langloh Parker at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title K Langloh Parker amp oldid 1186080138, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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