Native Men Remade
Autor Ty P Kawika Tenganen Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 oct 2008
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780822343387
ISBN-10: 082234338X
Pagini: 296
Ilustrații: 25 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 157 x 239 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Duke University Press
ISBN-10: 082234338X
Pagini: 296
Ilustrații: 25 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 157 x 239 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: Duke University Press
Cuprins
List of Illustrations ix
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction: Lele i Ka P¿ 1
1. Engagements with Modernity 33
2. Re-membering Nationhood and Koa at the Temple of State 65
3. Pu'ukohol¿: At the Mound of the Whale 93
4. K¿ i Mua—Cast into the Men's House 125
5. Narrating K¿nanka: Talk Story, Place, and Identity 163
Conclusion: The Journeys of Hawaiian Men 199
Appendix: 'Awa Talk Story at Pani, 2005 219
Notes 229
Glossary of Hawaiian Words 239
References 247
Index 267
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xv
Introduction: Lele i Ka P¿ 1
1. Engagements with Modernity 33
2. Re-membering Nationhood and Koa at the Temple of State 65
3. Pu'ukohol¿: At the Mound of the Whale 93
4. K¿ i Mua—Cast into the Men's House 125
5. Narrating K¿nanka: Talk Story, Place, and Identity 163
Conclusion: The Journeys of Hawaiian Men 199
Appendix: 'Awa Talk Story at Pani, 2005 219
Notes 229
Glossary of Hawaiian Words 239
References 247
Index 267
Recenzii
"This book concerns a distinctive Hawaiian mens movement dedicated to decolonizing male consciousness by means of ritualized physical disciplines modeled after historically resonant warrior images. The writing is powerful, and the point of view is a compelling blend of interpretive humility and analytical forthrightness. Offering a wealth of insider testimony drawn from detailed interviews and from his own engaged experience in the Hale Mua, Ty P. Kawika Tengan makes contemporary Hawaiian struggles and sensibilities accessible to non-Hawaiians by contextualizing them historically, culturally, and comparatively. This work will interest scholars of gender, race, and postcolonial cultures, as well as both academic and non-specialist readers interested in the contemporary Pacific.--Rena Lederman, Princeton University
"Native Men Remade is a tour de force. Ty P. Kawika Tengan combines participant observation and archival and oral history in a study of the Hale Mua, a group of Hawaiian men who have revived ancient martial arts, carving skills, and rituals. As both member and ethnographer, Tengan engages passionate debates about the emasculation of Hawaiian men by colonialism and tourism, the contested place of men and women in nationalism, and feminist critiques of Hawaiian patriarchy and gender violence. For Hawaiian peoples navigating their future, he suggests there are more islands of hope than of despair.--Margaret Jolly, Head of the Gender Relations Centre, The Australian National University
"The four men on the cover of this important book handsome, proud, engaged in manly activities look like they have stepped out of a picture of Hawaii by John Webber drawn during Captain Cooks final voyage (1776-80).... Tengans beautifully observed and written ethnography gives a compelling sense of being there and passing through the Hale Mua, and the ethnographic narrative is set within the wider context of Hawaiian and colonial history and the associated academic debates around these complex subjects, which he presents with exceptional clarity. This excellent study more than achieves its objective of seeking to create a space in which various theories and methodologies of indigeneity and anthropology articulate new forms of knowledge and understanding of sociocultural process. - Kaori OConnor, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 2012
"Native Men Remade is a tour de force. Ty P. Kawika Tengan combines participant observation and archival and oral history in a study of the Hale Mua, a group of Hawaiian men who have revived ancient martial arts, carving skills, and rituals. As both member and ethnographer, Tengan engages passionate debates about the emasculation of Hawaiian men by colonialism and tourism, the contested place of men and women in nationalism, and feminist critiques of Hawaiian patriarchy and gender violence. For Hawaiian peoples navigating their future, he suggests there are more islands of hope than of despair.--Margaret Jolly, Head of the Gender Relations Centre, The Australian National University
"The four men on the cover of this important book handsome, proud, engaged in manly activities look like they have stepped out of a picture of Hawaii by John Webber drawn during Captain Cooks final voyage (1776-80).... Tengans beautifully observed and written ethnography gives a compelling sense of being there and passing through the Hale Mua, and the ethnographic narrative is set within the wider context of Hawaiian and colonial history and the associated academic debates around these complex subjects, which he presents with exceptional clarity. This excellent study more than achieves its objective of seeking to create a space in which various theories and methodologies of indigeneity and anthropology articulate new forms of knowledge and understanding of sociocultural process. - Kaori OConnor, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 2012
Notă biografică
Ty P. Kāwika Tengan is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Ethnic Studies at the University of Hawai'i, Mānoa.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
""Native Men Remade" is a tour de force. Ty P. Kāwika Tengan combines participant observation and archival and oral history in a study of the Hale Mua, a group of Hawaiian men who have revived ancient martial arts, carving skills, and rituals. As both member and ethnographer, Tengan engages passionate debates about the 'emasculation' of Hawaiian men by colonialism and tourism, the contested place of men and women in nationalism, and feminist critiques of Hawaiian patriarchy and gender violence. For Hawaiian peoples navigating their future, he suggests there are 'more islands of hope than of despair.'"--Margaret Jolly, Head of the Gender Relations Centre, The Australian National University
Descriere
An ethnographic study of the recuperation and construction of Hawaiian indigenous masculinity