Synopses & Reviews
This history presents an authoritative and comprehensive introduction to the experiences of Pacific islanders from their first settlement of the islands to the present day. It addresses the question of insularity and explores islanders' experiences thematically, covering such topics as early settlement, contact with Europeans, colonialism, politics, commerce, nuclear testing, tradition, ideology, and the role of women. It incorporates material on the Maori, the Irianese in western New Guinea, the settled immigrant communities in Fiji, New Caledonia and the Hawaiian monarchy and follows migrants to New Zealand, Australia and North America.
Review
' ... this work makes a landmark contribution to our understanding of the Pacific Islands.' University of New South Wales Centre for South Pacific Studies Newsletter
Synopsis
An authoritative and comprehensive history of the Pacific islanders from 40,000 BC to the present day.
Synopsis
'This history makes a landmark contribution to popular understanding of this expansive and diverse region. Taking a holistic approach, the book accommodates the geographical and cultural fluidity of the people. Topics include prehistoric settlement, land use and production, first contact with Europeans, gender roles, trade and labor, World War II, nuclear testing, postcolonial economies and politics, and continuing migration. Broad in scope and multidisciplinary in approach, this book covers the entire range of human experience in the region.'
Table of Contents
1. Contending approaches; 2. Settling the region; 3. Pacific Edens?; 4. Discovering outsiders; 5. Land, labour and independence; 6. New political orders; 7. Land, labour and dependency; 8. Invention of the native; 9. The war in the Pacific; 10. A nuclear Pacific; 11. The material world re-made; 12. The ideological world re-made; 13. The end of insularity?