Return to Kahiki : native Hawaiians in Oceania /
Cook, Kealani, 1976-
Return to Kahiki : native Hawaiians in Oceania / Kealani Cook. - Cambridge, United Kingdom : Cambridge University Press, (c)2018. - 1 online resource. - Studies in North American Indian history .
Includes bibliographies and index.
Cover; Half-title; Series information; Title page; Copyright information; Table of contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations Used in Footnotes; Introduction; 1 Ke Ao A Me Ka PÅ#x8D;; Ke Ao, Ka PÅ#x8D;, and the Motivations for Mission Work; Equality and Mission Work; The Mission Field; Hana Le'ale'a; Natives, Missionaries, and Empires; Tabiteauea: Christ and Tioba; 2 Among the Wild Dogs; Silence and Purge; Aloha, Madness, and Witchcraft in the Mission Field; Moekolohe: Sex and the Married Missionary; 3 A Kindred People; Kalakaua and the Polynesian Confederacy; Ka Na'auao Hawai'i: Staffing the Legation Together in One Pahu: Developing the TreatyA Kindred People: Kinship Appeals; The Uses of Aloha and 'Ohana; â#x80;#x9C;Very Few Live with Na'auao Like Oursâ#x80;#x9D;: Hawaiian Exceptionalism; Spreading the Hawaiian Na'auao; 4 The Hawaiian Model; Spreading the Fa'a Hawai'i; Nation Building and MÅ#x8D;'i Building; Securing the MÅ#x8D;'i; Bush, Poor, and the Nature of the Confederacy; A Poor Sketch; Aloha among Confederates, Diplomacy within the 'Ohana/'Aiga; How the Kaimiloa Beat the Adler; Things Fall Apart; 5 â#x80;#x9C;There Is Nothing That Separates Usâ#x80;#x9D;; Prologue: Stephen Pupuhi John Tamatoa Baker: Kanaka Capitalist, Politician, and TravelerTahiti: Networks and Connections; Aloha 'Aina: Land Claims; â#x80;#x9C;There Is No Little Thing One Fails to Recognizeâ#x80;#x9D;: Traces of an Oceanic Past; I ka 'Å#x8D;lelo NÅ#x8D; ke Ola: In the Language Is Life; An Open Bowl and an Open Gourd; The Haka Meets the Hula at Rotorua; 6 Maka'Ä#x81;inana or Servants of the Dollar?; The Gospel of the Oceanic Yeoman; Land and Power under Empire; Economic Diversity and Independence; Wealth and Values; Poro'iâ#x80;#x99;s Critique: Akenui and Lawa; Lawa and the Critique of Empire; Conclusion; Glossary; Bibliography Special Collections and ArchivesNewspapers, Periodicals, and Annuals; Published Primary Sources; Secondary; Index
An important new analysis of Native Hawaiian efforts to construct relationships with other Oceanic peoples as missionaries, diplomats, and tourists.
9781108173940
Hawaiians--Ethnic relations.
Hawaiians--History.--Oceania
Missionaries--History.--Hawaii
Electronic Books.
DU624 / .R488 2018
Return to Kahiki : native Hawaiians in Oceania / Kealani Cook. - Cambridge, United Kingdom : Cambridge University Press, (c)2018. - 1 online resource. - Studies in North American Indian history .
Includes bibliographies and index.
Cover; Half-title; Series information; Title page; Copyright information; Table of contents; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations Used in Footnotes; Introduction; 1 Ke Ao A Me Ka PÅ#x8D;; Ke Ao, Ka PÅ#x8D;, and the Motivations for Mission Work; Equality and Mission Work; The Mission Field; Hana Le'ale'a; Natives, Missionaries, and Empires; Tabiteauea: Christ and Tioba; 2 Among the Wild Dogs; Silence and Purge; Aloha, Madness, and Witchcraft in the Mission Field; Moekolohe: Sex and the Married Missionary; 3 A Kindred People; Kalakaua and the Polynesian Confederacy; Ka Na'auao Hawai'i: Staffing the Legation Together in One Pahu: Developing the TreatyA Kindred People: Kinship Appeals; The Uses of Aloha and 'Ohana; â#x80;#x9C;Very Few Live with Na'auao Like Oursâ#x80;#x9D;: Hawaiian Exceptionalism; Spreading the Hawaiian Na'auao; 4 The Hawaiian Model; Spreading the Fa'a Hawai'i; Nation Building and MÅ#x8D;'i Building; Securing the MÅ#x8D;'i; Bush, Poor, and the Nature of the Confederacy; A Poor Sketch; Aloha among Confederates, Diplomacy within the 'Ohana/'Aiga; How the Kaimiloa Beat the Adler; Things Fall Apart; 5 â#x80;#x9C;There Is Nothing That Separates Usâ#x80;#x9D;; Prologue: Stephen Pupuhi John Tamatoa Baker: Kanaka Capitalist, Politician, and TravelerTahiti: Networks and Connections; Aloha 'Aina: Land Claims; â#x80;#x9C;There Is No Little Thing One Fails to Recognizeâ#x80;#x9D;: Traces of an Oceanic Past; I ka 'Å#x8D;lelo NÅ#x8D; ke Ola: In the Language Is Life; An Open Bowl and an Open Gourd; The Haka Meets the Hula at Rotorua; 6 Maka'Ä#x81;inana or Servants of the Dollar?; The Gospel of the Oceanic Yeoman; Land and Power under Empire; Economic Diversity and Independence; Wealth and Values; Poro'iâ#x80;#x99;s Critique: Akenui and Lawa; Lawa and the Critique of Empire; Conclusion; Glossary; Bibliography Special Collections and ArchivesNewspapers, Periodicals, and Annuals; Published Primary Sources; Secondary; Index
An important new analysis of Native Hawaiian efforts to construct relationships with other Oceanic peoples as missionaries, diplomats, and tourists.
9781108173940
Hawaiians--Ethnic relations.
Hawaiians--History.--Oceania
Missionaries--History.--Hawaii
Electronic Books.
DU624 / .R488 2018