Jedda
by Jane Mills

Jedda Book Cover
Jedda Cover

Synopsis

Filmed in 1955 Jedda was the first Australian feature film to use Aboriginal actors in lead roles, the first to be filmed in colour and the first to be shown at the Cannes film festival.

It tells the tragic story of a young Aboriginal girl of the Arunte tribe, adopted by a white woman, Sarah McCann, as a surrogate for her own baby who has died.

She raises her as a white child, isolating her from Aboriginal contact.

But when Marbuck, an Aboriginal man seeking work arrives on the station, Jedda is fascinated by him.

Jedda was one of several popular melodramas of the post-World War II era that dealt with miscegenation.

Mills explores these themes and the representation of the Australian Aborigine, while making comparisons to the Native American sub-genre of the Hollywood Western.

Publication

Publisher Currency Press
Year 2012
Binding Paperback
Edition UK ed.
Pages 89
Place Strawberry Hills, N.S.W
Language English
ISBN-13 9780868199207
ISBN-10 0868199206
LCCN 2012452412
LCC PN1997.2.J39 M55 2012
DCC 791.4372

Jedda is a play written by Jane Mills and published by Currency Press in Strawberry Hills, N.S.W (2012).

Digital editions available on Amazon Kindle .

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