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Spanning four centuries and vast space, this book combines the
global history of ideas with particular histories of encounters
between European voyagers and Indigenous people in Oceania (Island
Southeast Asia, New Guinea, Australia, New Zealand, and the Pacific
Islands). Douglas shows how prevailing concepts of human
difference, or race, influenced travellers' approaches to
encounters. Yet their presuppositions were often challenged or
transformed by the appearance, conduct, and lifestyle of local
inhabitants. The book's original theory and method reveal traces of
Indigenous agency in voyagers' representations which in turn
provided key evidence for the natural history of man and the
science of race. In keeping with recent trends in colonial
historiography, Douglas diverts historical attention from imperial
centres to so-called peripheries, discredits the outmoded
stereotype that Europeans necessarily dominated non-Europeans, and
takes local agency seriously.
How, when, and why has the Pacific been a locus for imagining
different futures by those living there as well as passing through?
What does that tell us about the distinctiveness or otherwise of
this "sea of islands"? Foregrounding the work of leading and
emerging scholars of Oceania, Pacific Futures brings together a
diverse set of approaches to, and examples of, how futures are
being conceived in the region and have been imagined in the past.
Individual chapters engage the various and sometimes contested
futures yearned for, unrealized, and even lost or forgotten, that
are particular to the Pacific as a region, ocean, island network,
destination, and home. Contributors recuperate the futures hoped
for and dreamed up by a vast array of islanders and outlanders-from
Indigenous federalists to Lutheran improvers to Cantonese small
business owners-making these histories of the future visible. In so
doing, the collection intervenes in debates about globalization in
the Pacific--and how the region is acted on by outside forces--and
postcolonial debates that emphasize the agency and resistance of
Pacific peoples in the context of centuries of colonial endeavor.
With a view to the effects of the "slow violence" of climate
change, the volume also challenges scholars to think about the
conditions of possibility for future-thinking at all in the midst
of a global crisis that promises cataclysmic effects for the
region. Pacific Futures highlights futures conceived in the context
of a modernity coproduced by diverse Pacific peoples, taking
resistance to categorization as a starting point rather than a
conclusion. With its hospitable approach to thinking about history
making and future thinking, one that is open to a wide range of
methodological, epistemological, and political interests and
commitments, the volume will encourage the writing of new histories
of the Pacific and new ways of talking about history in this field,
the region, and beyond.
First Published in 1998. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
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Material Encounters
Bronwen Douglas, Chris Ballard
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R3,968
Discovery Miles 39 680
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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This topical and conceptually innovative book proposes new
perspectives on the theme of materiality which, since the 1980s,
has animated work across and within disciplines in the Humanities
and Social Sciences. The particular focus of the chapters in this
volume are the materiality of knowledge produced through embodied
encounters between people, places, and things in the Pacific
Islands, New Guinea, Australia, and Myanmar. The authors consider
how materiality mediates the ways in which knowledge is generated
or acquired in encounters and becomes expressed through things and
material forms of inscription – charts and maps; journals,
letters, and reports; drawings; objects; human remains; legends,
cartouches, captions, labels, marginalia, and notes; and published
works of all kinds. The essays further address processes whereby
materialized knowledge is archived, conserved, distributed,
restricted, or dispersed – through serendipity, excess, loss,
silence, absence, and suppression. This book will be of great
interest to upper-level students, researchers, and academics in
History, Anthropology and Oceania Studies. The chapters in this
book were originally published as a special issue of History and
Anthropology.
"Across the great divide" tracks a Pacific historian's fruitful, if
at times ambivalent engagement with history and anthropology,
anticipating recent experiments in each discipline with the other's
theories, modes or perspectives. This collection of revised essays
and previously unpublished work provides a coherent and incisive
investigation into significant elements of received scholarly
wisdom about oceania, and deploys ethnographic and historical
narratives about colonial encounters in New Caledonia and elsewhere
in Melanesia to varied reflective ends. The essays cluster about
three internally coherent themes - indigenous leadership, fighting
and encounters with Christianity. These themes are linked by
shorter, reflexive pieces which probe changing but related
theoretical, methodological and discursive concerns recurrent in
the essays: notably, to denaturalize conventional categorical
boundaries, and to explore ways of knowing indigenous pasts through
critical readings of colonial texts. The collection is prefaced by
an introduction identifying those concerns and relating them to
changing wider discourses within and beyond the disciplines,
particularly postcolonial and feminist
Blending global scope with local depth, this book throws new light
on important themes. Spanning four centuries and vast space, it
combines the history of ideas with particular histories of
encounters between European voyagers and Indigenous people in
Oceania (Island Southeast Asia, New Guinea, Australia, New Zealand,
and the Pacific Islands).
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