After immersing himself in the culture of a remote Australian Indigenous community for close to a year, the young Japanese scholar Minoru Hokari emerged with a new world view. Gurindji Journey tells of Hokari’s experience living with the Gurindji people of Daguragu and Kalkaringi in the Northern Territory of Australia, absorbing their way of life and beginning to understand Aboriginal modes of seeing and being.
This compelling book, published in English posthumously, seven years after the author’s death, is a personal, philosophical, lyrical record of Hokari’s journey into Indigenous Aboriginal culture. Part memoir, part history, part theory, Gurindji Journey is the story of Hokari’s discovery of Gurindji modes of history and historical practice. It is an inspiring work that opens up new pathways for approaching cross-cultural history, anthropology, and historical epistemology.