Ethnography and Understandings of Aboriginal Drinking
- 1 July 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Drug Issues
- Vol. 22 (3) , 699-712
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002204269202200316
Abstract
Qualitative and ethnographic accounts of Aboriginal drinking tend to focus on the social meanings and uses of alcohol within particular groups. Such studies avoid a preoccupation with ‘causes' and instead examine the social milieu within which, sometimes excessive, drinking occurs without disapprobation. This article outlines the work of Australian social analysts of Aboriginal drinking who have documented the process of learning how to drink, the uses of drinking as a marker of equality, sociability and in exchanges, and the beliefs and meanings attached to alcohol use among Aboriginal people. Through such approaches, we can “make sense” of the persistence of what often seem to be dysfunctional styles of drinking among certain groups.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- “Problem deflation” and the ethnographic record: Interpretation and introspection in anthropological studies of alcoholJournal of Substance Abuse, 1990
- The Logic and Meaning of Anger Among Pintupi AboriginesMan, 1988
- LOVE MAGIC AND STYLE CHANGES WITHIN ONE CLASS OF LOVE MAGIC OBJECTSOceania, 1986
- Alcohol and Contingent Drunkenness in Central AustraliaAustralian Journal of Social Issues, 1984
- Alcohol and Ethnography: A Case of Problem Deflation? [and Comments and Reply]Current Anthropology, 1984
- WE ARE LOSING OUR BROTHERS: : SORCERY AND ALCOHOL IN AN ABORIGINAL COMMUNITYThe Medical Journal of Australia, 1977
- The Use of Alcohol in Three Salish Indian TribesQuarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 1958
- III. Alcoholism and the Sociocultural SituationQuarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 1956