Ephraim Bani 1944-2004 single work   obituary  
Issue Details: First known date: 2005... 2005 Ephraim Bani 1944-2004
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Ephraim began the linguistics part of his career with his collaboration with Terry Klokeid in 1970. This resulted in a series of papers in a volume co-edited by Bani and Klokeid (1971; Bani 1971a–d; Bani & Paipai 1971), which comprised the first linguistically informed descriptive treatment of Western Torres Strait Island Language (Kala Lagaw Ya), and the first treatment of an indigenous language of Australia by a native speaker, involving the creation of terms in Kala Lagaw Ya for the concepts involved in grammatical analysis. Ephraim continued this work with a paper for the 1974 conference of the Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies (Bani 1976); other papers resulting from his collaboration with Klokeid appeared in 1977, 1979, and 1981. Later in 1974, Ephraim enrolled as a student (later a teacher) at the nascent School of Australian Linguistics in Darwin (later Batchelor). At that time he developed the beginnings of his analyses of grammatical gender and of adverbials of space in Kala Lagaw Ya. These were published later as ‘Garka a ipika’ (1987) and ‘The morphodirectional sphere’ (2001). The former was the first, and is to date the only, treatment of grammar and semantics of an indigenous Australian language written in that language and published in a refereed journal.' (Introduction)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Australian Aboriginal Studies no. 1 2005 Z1217251 2005 periodical issue

    'This collection of papers was originally inspired by a workshop on native title and archaeology hosted as part of the Australasian Society for Historical Archaeology Conference held in Adelaide in 2000. It received further impetus due to repeated calls for practice guidelines as well as questions about the relevance of archaeological evidence in native title from practitioners, lawyers, native title representative bodies and the requirements of expert witnesses involved in Federal Court trials.'  (Editorial introduction)

    2005
    pg. 122-125
Last amended 4 Oct 2017 15:43:05
122-125 Ephraim Bani 1944-2004small AustLit logo Australian Aboriginal Studies
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