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Globalization and Culture Change in the Pacific Islands 1/e

Victoria S. Lockwood

Published September 2003 by Prentice Hall
Copyright 2003, 493 pp., Paper
ISBN: 0-13-042173-1
List Price:
$51.60

Inventory Status:
In-Stock
   
Summary

Offering insight into the major changes that are taking place in the context of increasing globalization in Pacific Island societies, the authors seek to “ground” globalization in concrete real life cases of communities that are dealing with specific processes of globalization and formulating their own responses in their own cultural terms. KEY TOPICS: The case studies presented reflect the many different cultural contexts of island societies as they deal with: global politics, nation states, and ethnic conflict; global economic integration and transnationalism; evolving identities and cultural representations; changes in patterns of social and community relations; and increasing integration into global religions. MARKET: For anyone interested in the effects of globalization on the peoples and cultures of the Pacific.

Features

  • Clearly written case studies—Describe and analyze the experiences of people in different developing regions of the world as they confront, resist, and reshape forces of globalization on a daily basis.
    • Shows students how Pacific Island societies are responding to and shaping the forces of globalization.

  • Views globalization “on the ground.”
    • Provides students with a look at the day-to-day effects of globalization on people's lives.

  • Contributing authors are respected, currently active anthropologists— Chosen for their expertise in issues of change and globalization.
    • Provides students with a clear view of cutting edge research, findings and views from experts in the field.



Table of Contents

I. INTRODUCTION.

 1. The Global Imperative and Pacific Island Societies, Victoria S. Lockwood.

 2. Need the Pacific Always Be So Pacific?, Robert Borofsky.

II. GLOBAL POLITICS, NATION STATES, AND ETHNIC CONFLICT.

 3. Crime and “Tribal” Warfare in Papua New Guinea, Paul Roscoe.

 4. Fiji's Coups: The Politics of Representation and the Representation of Politics, Martha Kaplan.

 5. Legal Pluralism in Pacific Island Societies, Richard Scaglion.

 6. Stepping Stones to National Consciousness: The Solomon Islands Case, Christine Jourdan.

 7. Print Advertising and Nation Making in Metropolitan Papua New Guinea, Robert J. Foster.

III. GLOBAL ECONOMIC INTEGRATION, TRANSNATIONALISM AND THE ENVIRONMENT.

 8. Tongans Are All Connected: Tongan Transnationalism, Helen Morton Lee.

 9. Global Imperatives and Local Desires: Competing Economic and Environmental Interests in Melanesian Communities, Martha Macintyre and Simon Foale.

10. Transnationalism and Transformation in Samoan Society, Cluny MacPherson.

11. Wave and Reflection: Charting Marshallese Participation in Globalizing Processes, Jim Hess.

12. Market Highs: Alcohol, Drugs, and the Global Economy in Oceania, Mac Marshall.

13. Recovering and Rebuilding After the Tsunami in Papua New Guinea: International Aid and Village Aspirations, Robert Welsch.

14. The Meanings of Work in Contemporary Palau: Policy Implications of Globalization in the Pacific, Karen L. Nero, Femina Brel Murray, and Michael L. Burton.

15. Environmental Change, Economic Development, and Emigration in Tuvalu, John Connell.

IV. IDENTITIES AND CULTURAL REPRESENTATIONS.

16. Toward an Ethnographically Grounded Study of Modernity in Papua New Guinea, Deborah Gewertz and Fred Errignton.

17. Placing Tahitian Identities: Rooted in Land and Enmeshed in Representations, Miriam Kahn.

18. The Impact of the Pacific War on Modern Micronesian Identity, Linnette Poyer, Suzanne Falgout and Laurence M. Carucci.

19. Tradition Sells: Identity Merchandise in the Island Pacific, Jocelyn Linnekin.

20. Cannibalizing, Commodifying, or Creating Culture? Power and Art in Sepik River Tourism, Eric K. Silverman.

V. SOCIAL RELATIONS, COMMUNITY, AND WELL-BEING.

21. Kilem Taem (Killing Time) in a Postcolonial Town: Young People and Settlements in Port Vila, Vanuatu, Jean Mitchell.

22. South Seas Confidential: The Politics of Interethnic Relationships in Colonial Samoa, Paul Shankman.

23. Pushing Children Up: Maternal Obligation, Health and Illness in the Tongan Ethnoscape, Heather Young Leslie.

24. Transformation of Person and Place on Enewetak and Ujelang Atoll, Lawrence M. Carucci.

VI. GLOBAL/LOCAL RELIGIONS.

25. Between Earth and Heaven: Living in the Last Missionary Frontier, John Barker.

26. Converted Worlds, Converted Lives: History and Opposition in Agarabi Adventism, George Westermark.




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