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Hawai'i Is My Haven - Race and Indigeneity in the Black Pacific (Hardcover)
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Hawai'i Is My Haven - Race and Indigeneity in the Black Pacific (Hardcover)
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Hawai'i Is My Haven maps the context and contours of Black life in
the Hawaiian Islands. This ethnography emerges from a decade of
fieldwork with both Hawai'i-raised Black locals and Black
transplants who moved to the Islands from North America, Africa,
and the Caribbean. Nitasha Tamar Sharma highlights the paradox of
Hawai'i as a multiracial paradise and site of unacknowledged
antiBlack racism. While Black culture is ubiquitous here,
African-descended people seem invisible. In this formerly sovereign
nation structured neither by the US Black/White binary nor the
one-drop rule, nonWhite multiracials, including Black Hawaiians and
Black Koreans, illustrate the coarticulation and limits of race and
the native/settler divide. Despite erasure and racism, nonmilitary
Black residents consider Hawai'i their haven, describing it as a
place to "breathe" that offers the possibility of becoming local.
Sharma's analysis of race, indigeneity, and Asian settler
colonialism shifts North American debates in Black and Native
studies to the Black Pacific. Hawai'i Is My Haven illustrates what
the Pacific offers members of the African diaspora and how they in
turn illuminate race and racism in "paradise."
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