Megan Morais is an ethnochoreologist and teacher of dance and religion. Through various grants, she has documented dances of several Indigenous Australian groups, including Nunggubuyu, Wanindilyaugwa (Anindilyakwa), Antikirinya, Yanyuwa and Warlpiri. She was a visiting researcher at the University of New England and The University of Sydney and has published several articles in academic journals and encyclopedias. The late Lucy Nampijinpa Martin was an integral part of the women's business (ritual ceremony and activity) documented in 1981-82. She has been essential in the repatriation of materials to the community. As one of the leading business women in Willowra she was the one who knew the songs, designs and dances. Lucy's work features throughout this book it includes the designs she drew from 1981-82 and the songs she sang then, and sang later for recording purposes. Sadly, Lucy passed away in 2024. Her legacy lives on in the ceremonial knowledge she has shared in this book Myfany Turpin is a musicologist, linguist and associate professor at The University of Sydney where she conducts fieldwork on languages and songs of Central Australia. She has published extensively on Aboriginal song-poetry and publishes in the fields of music, linguistics and ethnobiology. She is the co-author of Yaru! Gudjal learner's guide and dictionary (Aboriginal Studies Press 2023).
“This book illustrates how archival materials can be a buttress to support Warlpiri women's performance traditions.” -- Rachel Perkins, filmmaker