Pacific Studies Journal
Volume 33, Number 2-3, Genealogies: Articulating Indigenous Anthropology in/of Oceania (2010)
Articles
GENEALOGIES: ARTICULATING INDIGENOUS ANTHROPOLOGY IN/OF OCEANIA
Ty P. Kāwika Tengan, Tēvita O. Ka‘ili, and Rochelle Tuitagava‘a Fonoti
TĀ, VĀ , AND MOANA: TEMPORALITY, SPATIALITY, AND INDIGENEITY
Hūfanga ‘Okusitino Māhina
INDIGENOUS ANTHROPOLOGY AND THE KAVA MYTH IN MANU’A
Unasa Leulu Felise Va’a
TEU LE VA: TOWARD A NATIVE ANTHROPOLOGY
Melani Anae
THE INTERWEAVING OF PEOPLE, TIME, AND PLACE—WHAKAPAPA AS CONTEXT AND METHOD
Lily George, Te Kapotai/Ngaapuhi/Paakehaa
BETWEEN TOLERANCE AND TALK: IDIOMATIC KINSHIP AND ETHNOGRAPHY IN THE MULTIETHNIC PACIFIC
Ping-Ann Addo
A DIFFERENT WEIGHT: TENSION AND PROMISE IN “INDIGENOUS ANTHROPOLOGY”
Fa‘anofo Lisaclaire Uperesa
COLLABORATION AND CAPACITY BUILDING IN THE CLASSROOM: A DECOLONIZING TEACHING AGENDA TO CREATE A CADRE OF INDIGENOUS RESEARCHERS
Holly M. Barker and Rochelle Tuitagava‘a Fonoti
Front Matter
Vol. 33 No. 2/3 (2010): Pacific Studies Front Matter
The Jonathan Nāpela Center for Hawaiian and Pacific Islands Studies
Full Issue
Vol. 33 No. 2/3 (2010): Pacific Studies Full Issue
The Jonathan Nāpela Center for Hawaiian and Pacific Islands Studies