John Rudder

For the U. S. Marine, see John E. Rudder.
Dr John Rudder

John Rudder, PhD, has studied the Australian Aboriginal languages, of Arnhem Land (Gupapuyngu) in the Northern Territory and the state of New South Wales (Wiradjuri), Australia.

Work

In 1964, Rudder went to Arnhem Land as a teacher, and later as a community development worker and educator among adult Indigenous Australians. In that time he learned to speak the language of the region, and analysed its grammar and syntax.

He sought to gain formal educational qualifications after moving to Canberra, and has since gained a master's degree in Anthropology focussing on Aboriginal Classificatory Theory and Cognitive Structures and a Doctor of Philosophy degree in Aboriginal Anthropology focusing on Yolngu Cosmology (focusing on beliefs regarding the nature of existence and how the world is ordered.)

Language teaching

From 1993 to 2010, Rudder was heavily involved, with Stan Grant, an elder of the Wiradjuri people, in reclaiming the Wiradjuri language that was at that time effectively dead, even though this is arguably the biggest tribe in New South Wales. He took anthropological studies and records amounting to the records of fewer than 2,000 words and applied the language and cognitive analysis he had previously applied to the Yolngu language, to begin to reconstruct the Wiradjuri language. With Grant, who provided a sense of the language remembered from his youth in World War II among Wiradjuri-speaking family and tribal members, notably his grandfather, they have established training sessions to teach the language across Wiradjuri country. Intensive weekend camps, workshops, and other sessions[1] have seen a growing number of Wiradjuri speakers who are beginning to re-establish the language. For instance, these speakers are beginning to write songs and poems that are then being taught to children.

Secondary effects of the cultural use of the Wiradjuri language are being felt within the language group, and beyond. Examples are:

Art

Rudder has been an artist for many years, previously entering the Blake Prize for Religious Art. He recently returned to painting, and his entry was selected for display in the exhibition of the inaugural Phoenix Prize for spiritual art in 2005.

Personal life

Rudder has been a member of the Uniting Church in Australia.

Until her death in 2008 he was married to Trixie, a part-time lay pastor for a congregation of the Uniting Church at Gunning, near Canberra.

In December 2010 he remarried and moved to Sydney. His second wife Dr Julie Waddy PhD OAM worked as an ethnobiologist and linguist working with the Anglican Church Missionary Society on Groote Eylandt in the Northern Territory with the aboriginal people for 30 years, and returned to Sydney in 2005.[4]

John says that his relationships – what most white Australians would call friendships and family – are mostly with the Aboriginal people.

Publications

Rudder has self-published a book on the counting (relationship) system of Australian Aborigines, has produced teaching materials for his courses in aboriginal speaking and thought, and is in the process of completing an Aboriginal–English dictionary. His recent writing has been extensively in collaboration with Stan Grant.

Rudder's publications include:

In July 2006, the Parkes Shire Library (central west NSW) inaugurated its collection of books on Wiradjuri[5] attended by Wiradjuri language students from Primary schools at Forbes, Peak Hill and Central West Christian School, whose teachers were learning from Rudder and Grant.

See also

External links

References

  1. Granting Success: Major Grants: The Wiradjuri Language Development Project, Dubbo, Grants Report 2003, NSW Department of Aboriginal Affairs, accessed 25 April 2008
  2. Yalmambiladhaany (“the ones who teach each other”): an Aboriginal women’s peer education program in the Mid-Western Area Health Service of New South Wales (paper); Robyn Forrester, Mid Western Area Health Service; Deborah Kenna, Mid Western Area Health Service/Orange Community Health Centre; 8th National Rural Health Conference, Alice Springs, Northern Territory, 10–13 March 2005, accessed 25 April 2008
  3. Trish Albert, Keeping Language Alive, National Museum of Australia, 2008
  4. Australia honours minister to men, Joseph Smith, 26 January 2008, Sydney Anglicans, accessed 31 January 2011
  5. Wiradjuri language revival, Jane Simpson, Pacific and Regional Archive for Digital Sources in Endangered Cultures, University of Sydney, 28 July 2006, accessed 25 April 2008
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