The World and All the Things upon It
eBook - PDF

The World and All the Things upon It

Native Hawaiian Geographies of Exploration

  1. 342 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

The World and All the Things upon It

Native Hawaiian Geographies of Exploration

About this book

Winner of the Modern Language Association’s Prize for Studies in Native American Literatures, Cultures, and Languages
Winner of the American Historical Association’s Albert J. Beveridge Award
Winner of NAISA's Best Subsequent Book Award
Winner of the Western History Association's John C. Ewers Award
Finalist for the John Hope Franklin Prize


What if we saw indigenous people as the active agents of global exploration rather than as the passive objects of that exploration? What if, instead of conceiving of global exploration as an enterprise just of European men such as Columbus or Cook or Magellan, we thought of it as an enterprise of the people they “discovered”? What could such a new perspective reveal about geographical understanding and its place in struggles over power in the context of colonialism?

The World and All the Things upon It addresses these questions by tracing how Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian people) explored the outside world and generated their own understandings of it in the century after James Cook’s arrival in 1778. Writing with verve, David A. Chang draws on the compelling words of long-ignored Hawaiian-language sources—stories, songs, chants, and political prose—to demonstrate how Native Hawaiian people worked to influence their metaphorical “place in the world.” We meet, for example, Ka?iana, a Hawaiian chief who took an English captain as his lover and, while sailing throughout the Pacific, considered how Chinese, Filipinos, Pacific Islanders, and Native Americans might shape relations with Westerners to their own advantage. Chang’s book is unique in examining travel, sexuality, spirituality, print culture, gender, labor, education, and race to shed light on how constructions of global geography became a site through which Hawaiians, as well as their would-be colonizers, perceived and contested imperialism, colonialism, and nationalism.

Rarely have historians asked how non-Western people imagined and even forged their own geographies of their colonizers and the broader world. This book takes up that task. It emphasizes, moreover, that there is no better way to understand the process and meaning of global exploration than by looking out from the shores of a place, such as Hawai?i, that was allegedly the object, and not the agent, of exploration.

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Yes, you can access The World and All the Things upon It by David A. Chang in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & 19th Century History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Title
  4. Copyright
  5. Contents
  6. Introduction: Making Native Hawaiian Global Geographies
  7. 1 Looking Out from Hawai.i’s Shore: The Exploration of the World Is the Inheritance of Native Hawaiians
  8. 2 Paddling Out to See: Direct Exploration by Kanaka in the Late Eighteenth Century
  9. 3 A New Religion from Kahiki: Christianity, Textuality, and Exploration, 1820– 1832
  10. 4 The World and All the Things upon It: Geography Education and Textbooks in Hawai.i, 1831–1878
  11. 5 Hawaiian Indians and Black Kanakas: Racial Trajectories of Diasporic Kanaka Laborers
  12. 6 Bone of Our Bone: The Geography of Sacred Power, 1850s–1870s
  13. 7 “We Will Be Comparable to the Indian Peoples”: Recognizing Likeness between Kanaka and American Indians, 1832–1895
  14. Epilogue: Genealogies of the Present in Occupied Hawai'i
  15. Acknowledgments
  16. Notes
  17. Index