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Books > History > Australasian & Pacific history
Coral and Concrete, Greg Dvorak's cross-cultural history of
Kwajalein Atoll, Marshall Islands, explores intersections of
environment, identity, empire, and memory in the largest inhabited
coral atoll on earth. Approaching the multiple "atollscapes" of
Kwajalein's past and present as Marshallese ancestral land,
Japanese colonial outpost, Pacific War battlefield, American
weapons-testing base, and an enduring home for many, Dvorak delves
into personal narratives and collective mythologies from
contradictory vantage points. He navigates the tensions between
"little stories" of ordinary human actors and "big stories" of
global politics-drawing upon the "little" metaphor of the coral
organisms that colonize and build atolls, and the "big" metaphor of
the all-encompassing concrete that buries and co-opts the past.
Building upon the growing body of literature about militarism and
decolonization in Oceania, this book advocates a layered, nuanced
approach that emphasizes the multiplicity and contradictions of
Pacific Islands histories as an antidote to American hegemony and
globalization within and beyond the region. It also brings
Japanese, Korean, Okinawan, and American perspectives into
conversation with Micronesians' recollections of colonialism and
war. This transnational history-built upon a combination of
reflective personal narrative, ethnography, cultural studies, and
postcolonial studies-thus resituates Kwajalein Atoll as a pivotal
site where Islanders have not only thrived for thousands of years,
but also mediated between East and West, shaping crucial world
events. Based on multi-sited ethnographic and archival research, as
well as Dvorak's own experiences growing up between Kwajalein, the
United States, and Japan, Coral and Concrete integrates narrative
and imagery with semiotic analysis of photographs, maps, films, and
music, traversing colonial tropical fantasies, tales of victory and
defeat, missile testing, fisheries, war-bereavement rituals, and
landowner resistance movements, from the twentieth century through
the present day. Representing history as a perennial struggle
between coral and concrete, the book offers an Oceanian paradigm
for decolonization, resistance, solidarity, and optimism that
should appeal to all readers far beyond the Marshall Islands.
Historians and archaeologists define primary states-"cradles of
civilization" from which all modern nation states ultimately
derive-as significant territorially-based, autonomous societies in
which a centralized government employs legitimate authority to
exercise sovereignty. The well-recognized list of regions that
witnessed the development of primary states is short: Egypt,
Mesopotamia, the Indus Valley, China, Mesoamerica, and Andean South
America. Drawing on archaeological and ethnohistorical sources,
Robert J. Hommon demonstrates that Polynesia, with primary states
in both Hawaii and Tonga, should be added to this list. The Ancient
Hawaiian State is a study of the ancient Hawaiians' transformation
of their Polynesian chiefdoms into primary state societies,
independent of any pre-existing states. The emergence of primary
states is one of the most revolutionary transformations in human
history, and Hawaii's metamorphosis was so profound that in some
ways the contact-era Hawaiian states bear a closer resemblance to
our world than to that of their closely-related East Polynesian
contemporaries, 4,000 kilometers to the south. In contrast to the
other six regions, in which states emerged in the distant,
pre-literate past, the transformation of Hawaiian states are
documented in an extensive body of oral traditions preserved in
written form, a rich literature of early post-contact eyewitness
accounts of participants and Western visitors, as well as an
extensive archaeological record. Part One of this book describes
three competing Hawaiian states, based on the islands of Hawai`i,
Maui, and O`ahu, that existed at the time of first contact with the
non-Polynesian world (1778-79). Part Two presents a detailed
definition of state society and how contact-era Hawaii satisfies
this definition, and concludes with three comparative chapters
summarizing the Tongan state and chiefdoms in the Society Islands
and Marquesas Archipelagos of East Polynesia. Part Three provides a
model of the Hawaii State Transformation across a thousand years of
history. The results of this significant study further the analysis
of political development throughout Polynesia while profoundly
redefining the history and research of primary state formation.
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