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Neither Cargo nor Cult: Ritual Politics and the Colonial Imagination in Fiji
Contributor(s): Kaplan, Martha (Author)
ISBN: 0822315939     ISBN-13: 9780822315933
Publisher: Duke University Press
OUR PRICE:   $25.60  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: June 1995
Qty:
Annotation: "Inherently multidisciplinary, "Neither Cargo nor Cult" is terrific. Linked with both general theoretical issues and the rich anthropological literature on Fijian societies, it consistently breaks new ground, charting new directions on the relationship between history and culture, and raising effectively perspectives not usually considered on the Fijian ethnographic record. There is nothing quite like it for Fiji or for the Pacific--and little from any other parts of the world."--Donald Brenneis, Pitzer College

"An extraordinary book. Martha Kaplan's cultural analysis of Fijian politics is complex and subtle."--Henry J. Rutz, Hamilton College

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Anthropology - Cultural & Social
- Political Science
Dewey: 306.099
LCCN: 94-38508
Lexile Measure: 1420
Physical Information: 0.72" H x 6.05" W x 9.02" (0.90 lbs) 248 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
In the 1880s an oracle priest, Navosavakadua, mobilized Fijians of the hinterlands against the encroachment of both Fijian chiefs and British colonizers. British officials called the movement the Tuka cult, imagining it as a contagious superstition that had to be stopped. Navosavakadua and many of his followers, deemed "dangerous and disaffected natives," were exiled. Scholars have since made Tuka the standard example of the Pacific cargo cult, describing it as a millenarian movement in which dispossessed islanders sought Western goods by magical means. In this study of colonial and postcolonial Fiji, Martha Kaplan examines the effects of narratives made real and traces a complex history that began neither as a search for cargo, nor as a cult.
Engaging Fijian oral history and texts as well as colonial records, Kaplan resituates Tuka in the flow of indigenous Fijian history-making and rereads the archives for an ethnography of British colonizing power. Proposing neither unchanging indigenous culture nor the inevitable hegemony of colonial power, she describes the dialogic relationship between plural, contesting, and changing articulations of both Fijian and colonial culture.
A remarkable enthnographic account of power and meaning, Neither Cargo nor Cult addresses compelling questions within anthropological theory. It will attract a wide audience among those interested in colonial and postcolonial societies, ritual and religious movements, hegemony and resistance, and the Pacific Islands.