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The civil conflict in Solomon Islands (1998-2003) is often blamed
on the failure of the nation-state to encompass culturally diverse
and politically fragmented communities. Writing of Ranongga Island,
the author tracks engagements with strangers across many realms of
life-pre-colonial warfare, Christian conversion, logging and
conservation, even post-conflict state building. She describes
startling reversals in which strangers become attached to local
places, even as kinspeople are estranged from one another and from
their homes. Against stereotypes of rural insularity, she argues
that a distinctive cosmopolitan openness to others is evident in
the rural Solomons in times of war and peace.
The phrase Christian politics points in two directions: political
relations between denominations in one direction, and ways that
Christian churches contribute to debates about how society should
be governed in the other. The contributors to this volume address
Christian politics in both senses and argue that Christianity is
always and inevitably political in the Pacific Islands. Drawing on
ethnographic and historical research in Papua New Guinea, Solomon
Islands, Vanuatu, and Fiji, the authors argue that Christianity and
politics have redefined each other in much of Oceania in ways that
make the two categories inseparable at any level of analysis. The
individual chapters vividly illuminate the ways in which Christian
politics operate across a wide scale from interpersonal relations
to national and global interconnections.
The civil conflict in Solomon Islands (1998-2003) is often blamed
on the failure of the nation-state to encompass culturally diverse
and politically fragmented communities. Writing of Ranongga Island,
the author tracks engagements with strangers across many realms of
life-pre-colonial warfare, Christian conversion, logging and
conservation, even post-conflict state building. She describes
startling reversals in which strangers become attached to local
places, even as kinspeople are estranged from one another and from
their homes. Against stereotypes of rural insularity, she argues
that a distinctive cosmopolitan openness to others is evident in
the rural Solomons in times of war and peace.
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