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Anahulu: The Anthropology of History in the Kingdom of Hawaii, Volume 1
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Anahulu: The Anthropology of History in the Kingdom of Hawaii, Volume 1 Historical Ethnography Hardcover - 1992

by Kirch, Patrick Vinton.; Marshall Sahlins


From the publisher

From the late 1700s, Hawaiian society began to change rapidly as it responded to the growing world system of capital whose trade routes and markets crisscrossed the islands. Reflecting many years of collaboration between Marshall Sahlins, a prominent social anthropologist, and Patrick V. Kirch, a leading archaeologist of Oceania, "Anahulu" seeks out the traces of this transformation in a typical local center of the kingdom founded by Kamehameha: the Anahulu river valley of northwestern Oahu.
Volume I shows the surprising effects of the encounter with the imperial forces of commerce and Christianity the distinctive ways the Hawaiian people culturally organized the experience, from the structure of the kingdom to the daily life of ordinary people. Volume II examines the material record of changes in local social organization, economy and production, population, and domestic settlement arrangements. "

First line

In volume 1 we followed a strategy of working from general structures and events affecting the kingdom of Hawaii as a whole, to the particulars of Waialua and its ahupua'a territory, Kawailoa.

Details

  • Title Anahulu: The Anthropology of History in the Kingdom of Hawaii, Volume 1 Historical Ethnography
  • Author Kirch, Patrick Vinton.; Marshall Sahlins
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition First Edition
  • Publisher University Of Chicago Press, Chicago
  • Date October 15, 1992
  • ISBN 9780226733630