Gone Native in Polynesia

Captivity Narratives and Experiences from the South Pacific

Ian C Campbell author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:27th Aug '98

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Gone Native in Polynesia cover

A study of the experiences of Europeans and Americans in the age of early industrial overseas expansion who became detached from their own societies and lived among Pacific Islanders as integrated members of their communities.

A study of the experiences of Europeans and Americans who lived among Pacific islanders as integrated members of their communities. Jealousy, ethnocentism and violence on both sides competed with humanitarian interests and indigenous hospitality to shape the emerging pattern of relationships.Campbell presents a study of the lives and experiences of Europeans and Americans in the age of early industrial overseas expansions, who became detatched from their own societies and lived, sometimes for many years, among Pacific Islanders as integrated members of their communities, often with little hope of returning home and frequently with no wish to do so. As engaging as primitivism was to European philosophers, the realities of contact between seafarers and islanders who faced previously unimagined technological and human marvels were much more pragmatic. Jealousy, ethnocentrism, and violence on both sides competed with humanitarian interests and indigenous hospitality to shape the emerging pattern of relationships. At first, Europeans crossed the oceans only for compelling reasons: the passion for scientific research, the dedication to Christian evangelism, or the uncompromising profit motive. Later, settlers and government officials followed in the wake of these early explorers. Scattered in the interstices of contact relationships were large numbers of men whose interest was not in changing native society or profiting from it, but in experiencing primitive life and simply surviving itself. These men included castaways and deserters, some abandoned by their captains and others kidnapped by the islanders. Their prospects depended on their successful integration into Polynesian society—and in making themselves useful by applying European knowledge and skills to local situations and by mediating between islanders and their insistent visitors.

ISBN: 9780313307874

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 510g

208 pages