Podcast
Nimbin before and after: local voices on how the 1973 Aquarius Festival changed a town forever
The Conversation
The Conversation Media Group Ltd
03/05/2019
Metrics
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Abstract
In the north-east corner of Australia’s most populous state of New South Wales is a small former dairying and banana farming community. Today, however, that village is unrecognisable.
Nimbin is now widely acknowledged as Australia’s counter-cultural capital, a sister city to both Woodstock in New York State and Freetown Christiania in Denmark.
Among Nimbin’s tourist attractions today are its Hemp Embassy and the annual Mardi Grass festival in early May, which argues for the legislation of marijuana for personal and medicinal use.
The village’s transformation from a rural farming community to its present form can be traced to 1973, when Nimbin became the unlikely host of the Aquarius Festival – a counter-culture arts and music gathering presented by the radical Australian Union of Students.
These excerpts from the Nimbin Soundtrail are drawn from consultations and interviews with more than 60 Nimbin residents, Aquarius Festival participants and Indigenous elders.
Details
- Title
- Nimbin before and after: local voices on how the 1973 Aquarius Festival changed a town forever
- Creators
- Jeanti St Clair - Southern Cross University
- Publication Details
- The Conversation
- Publisher
- The Conversation Media Group Ltd
- Format
- Audio
- Grant note
- Jeanti St Clair has consulted in the past for Soundtrails as an associate producer. She was paid by Lismore City Council to produce the audio walk. She does not have any ongoing financial benefit from Soundtrails or Lismore City Council.
- Identifiers
- 991013267610402368
- Academic Unit
- Creative Arts; Faculty of Business, Law and Arts
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Podcast