• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Telling Pacific lives : prisms of process
  • Contains: Telling Pacific lives: from archetype to icon / Niel Gunson
    The Kila Wari stories: framing a life and preserving a cosmology / Deborah Van Heekeren
    From 'my story' to 'the story of myself'-colonial transformations of personal narratives among the Motu-Koita of Papua New Guinea / Michael Goddard
    Mobility, modernisation and agency: the life story of John Kikang from Papua New Guinea / Wolfgang Kempf
    Surrogacy and the simulacra of desire in Heian Japanese Women's life writing / Christina Houen
    'The story that came to me': gender, power and life history narratives-reflections on the ethics of ethnography in Fiji / Pauline McKenzie Aucoin
    A tartan clan in Fiji: narrating the coloniser 'within' the colonised / Lucy de Bruce
    Telling lives in Tuvalu / Michael Goldsmith
    My history: my calling / Alaima Talu
    Researching, (w)riting, releasing, and responses to a biography of Queen Salote of Tonga / Elizabeth Wood-Ellem
    On being a participant biographer: the search for J.W. Davidson / Doug Munro
    'You did what, Mr President!?!?' trying to write a biography of Tosiwo Nakayama / David Hanlon
    Telling the life of A.D. Patel / Brij V. Lal
    On writing a biography of William Pritchard / Andrew E. Robson
    Writing the colony: Walter Edward Gudgeon in the Cook Islands, 1898 to 1909 / Graeme Whimp
    An accidental biographer? on encountering, yet again, the ideas and actions of J.W. Burton / Christine Weir
    E.W.P. Chinnery: a self-made anthropologist / Geoffrey Gray
    Lives told: Australians in Papua and New Guinea / Hank Nelson
    Biography of a nation: compiling a historical dictionary of the Solomon Islands / Clive Moore.
  • Contributor: Lal, Brij V. [Other]; Luker, Vicki [Other]
  • Corporation: Australian National University, Division of Pacific and Asian History ; ANU E Press
  • Published: Canberra, ACT, Australia: ANU E Press, 2008
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (1 online resource (xiv, 301 pages)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 9781921313820; 192131382X; 9781921313813; 1921313811
  • Keywords: Civilization ; Manners and customs ; History & Archaeology ; Regions & Countries - Australia & Pacific Islands - Oceania ; Social groups ; Society and culture: general ; Pacific Ocean ; Islands of the Pacific ; Society and social sciences Society and social sciences ; Sociology and anthropology ; SOCIAL SCIENCE ; Anthropology ; Cultural ; Anecdotes ; Biographies ; Conference papers and proceedings ; Anthropology ; Ethnic studies ; Islands of the Pacific Biography. ; Islands of the Pacific Anecdotes. ; Islands of the Pacific Civilization Congresses. ; Islands of the Pacific Social life and customs Congresses. ; Islands of the Pacific Social life and customs Congresses ; Islands of the Pacific Anecdotes ; Islands of the Pacific Civilization Congresses ; Islands of the Pacific Biography ; Islands of the Pacific ;
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: Includes bibliographical references and index
    Title from PDF title page (viewed July 17, 2008)
    English
  • Description: "This volume of essays is an exploration of the way in which scholars from different disciplines, standpoints and theoretical orientations attempt to write life stories in the Pacific. It is the product of a conference organised by the Division of Pacific and Asian History at The Australian National University in December 2005. The aim of the conference was to explore ways in which Pacific lives are read and constructed through a variety of media: films, fiction, faction, history under four overarching themes. The first, Framing Lives, sought to explore various ways of constructing a life from a classic western perspective of birth, formation, experiences and death of an individual to other ways, for example, life as secondary to a longer genealogical entity, life as a symbol of collective experience, individual lives captured and fragmented in a mosaic of others, lives made meaningful by their implication in a particular historical or cultural web, the underlying values and world views that inform one or another approach to framing a life. The second theme, the Stuff of Life, looked at materials, methods and collaborative arrangements with which the biographer, autobiographer and recorder work, their objectives, constraints, inspirations, challenges and tricks. The third section, Story Lines, focused on formats and genres such as edited diaries, collections of writings, voice recordings, genres of biography autobiography, truth and fiction (verse, dance, novels) and the varieties and different advantages of narrative shapes that crystallise the telling of a life. The final section, Telling Lives/Changing Lives, focused on biography/autobiography and the consciousness of identity, history, purpose, lives as witness and windows, telling lives as change for those involved in the tale, the telling, the listening. The overall aim was to bring out both the generic or universal challenges of telling lives as well as to highlight the particular tendencies and trends in the Pacific. Yet these four themes, which seemed analytically promising at the outset, proved in practice difficult to disentangle from the presentations at the workshop"--Provided by publisher.
  • Access State: Open Access