OCEANIA NEWSLETTER No. 101, March 2021

Published quarterly by the Department of Anthropology and Development Studies, Radboud University, P.O. Box 9104, 6500 HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands.

The website of the newsletter is at: https://www.ru.nl/caos/cpas/publications/-newsletter/. At this site you can download old and new issues of the newsletter in PDF-format.

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Our online database is at http://cps.ruhosting.nl/CPAS/public/index/. This database contains information on Pacific literature that has been listed in the issues of the Oceania Newsletter since 1993. From 1993 backwards we are adding titles of articles and books that have appeared and were reviewed in journals that supply anthropological information on the Pacific. The Pacific is Indigenous , Melanasia, and . Literature on Asia is not included.

CONTENTS

1. Contemporary Dilemmas in : Table of Contents of a Special Section of Issue 7(14), 2020 of Antropologia del Sur 1-3 2. Received 3 3. New Books 3-24 4. Recent Publications 24-37

1. CONTEMPORARY DILEMMAS IN EASTER ISLAND: TABLE OF CONTENTS OF A SPECIAL SECTION OF ISSUE 7(14), 2020 OF ANTROPOLOGIS DEL SUR

See for more information the source pages, including online pdf-files, at:

 http://revistas.academia.cl/index.php/rantros/issue/view/175

89-126 La antropología chilena en Rapa Nui: Una retrospectiva DIEGO MUÑOZ, ANDREA SEELENFREUND & VALENTIA FAJRELDIN

Chilean Anthropology in Rapa Nui: A Retrospective. This essay analyzes the development of anthropology - and in particular Chilean social anthropology - in Rapa Nui and the place the island occupies in the discipline, by determining its characteristics and contributions to the local community. The study addresses three dimensions: 1) a historical analysis of the paradigms and theoretical transformations in the studies on Rapa Nui, 2) an approach to the studies from the institutionalization of the discipline and 3) an analysis of the relationships between researchers and informants in anthropological production and its repercussions on the appropriation of knowledge by the island community.

127-157 La tierra en Rapa Nui: La política del parentesco y los dispositivos estatales: Consensos y disensos en la definición de la propiedad DIEGO MUÑOZ

Land in Rapa Nui: The politics of kinship and state devices: Consensus and dissent in the definition of property. One of the central issues in the relations between Rapanui society and the Chilean State concerns the ownership of land and the forms of its transmission. The historical configuration of property in Hanga Roa is analyzed here, both from the Rapanui and the state point of view, and the mechanisms by which it has been transmitted within the Rapanui community. We have searched a corpus of 2,000 official land rights registration documents for the kinship chains that unite the people involved in the transfer of rights. This analysis covers ninety years of application of state instruments and allows us to identify the rapanui action logic in the acquisition and transfer of property. We conclude that the Rapanui land policy is a 1

mixture of local and state criteria, where kinship continues to be a determining factor in the definition of land ownership and transmission.

159-183 Procesos etnopolíticos de autodeterminación y perspectivas de conservación marina en Rapa Nui XIMENA LAGOS, BARBARA ESCOBAR, ANDREA SEELENFREUND, ALTAIR MAGRI & ANDRES MARIN

Ethnopolitical processes of self-determination and perspectives for marine conservation in Rapa Nui. This work describes the Rapanui ethnopolitical trajectory in its demand for self- determination and autonomy, linking it to current natural resource conservation processes, such as the creation of the multiple-use protected marine-coastal area. Milestones were identified through a bibliographic review and in-depth interviews with key actors, such as the Agreement of Will, anti-colonial movements, the special administration statute and initiatives in marine conservation, which denote conflicts with the Chilean State and the search for recognition. and self-determination. We observe that autonomy as a process has deepened in the last ten years, by using the institutional-legal and administrative mechanisms of the Chilean State to move towards its own forms of territorial management. In this sense, we affirm that the creation of the multiple-use coastal-marine protected area of Rapa Nui is rather part of a path of territorial self- determination at the marine scale than of a conservation strategy.

185-205 El Parlamento Rapa Nui y su actuar internacional (2001-2011) NICOLAS DELAIRE

The Rapa Nui Parliament and its international actions (2001-2011). Since its creation in 2001, the Rapa Nui Parliament introduced a new way of doing politics to assert its demands on the island. A modern component of Parliament was to turn to international alliances and participation in United Nations forums. In this paper we analyze such alliance building, particularly with the Pacific, and the intervention at the United Nations working groups. Thanks to this new network, and to an extremely favorable context, the Rapa Nui Parliament was able to confront with greater weight the responsibilities of the Chilean government and question the political institutions present on the island. The purpose of this article is to highlight the existence of a triangle between the Rapanui community, the State and international institutions and how Parliament contributed to its creation and consolidation.

207-233 Ariki Tapati Rapa Nui - Reinas de la Tapati Rapa Nui: Análisis de un dispositivo festivo y genérico THÉO MILIN

Ariki Tapati Rapa Nui - Queens of the Tapati Rapa Nui: Analysis of a festive and generic device. This article approaches the cultural festival of Tapati Rapa Nui from its 'key' figure, the queen, or ariki Tapati. We consider here the election of the queen as a "festive device" adopted by the Rapanui community that has changed according to identity and cultural proposals. Therefore, the queen is a figure that, due to her tensions, development and continuities, speaks to us, in a filigree, of a trajectory of rapanuization. It arises after a ritual, dynamic and changing process that develops mechanisms of the group, which participate in its social reproduction. Going through this process, combining community work ('umana) and competence ('a'ati), the queen finds herself subject to various limitations and obligations. She also acquires prerogatives and a power of representation by becoming "the face of the community."

235-260 La re-creación de la 'tradición' en el teatro contemporáneo maori y diaspórico samoano en Aotearoa: Una fuente de inspiración para la producción del teatro contemporáneo rapanui? MOIRA FORTIN

The re-creation of 'tradition' in contemporary Maori and diasporic Samoan theater in Aotearoa: A source of inspiration for contemporary Rapanui theater production? This article explores how notions of 'tradition' are imagined, recreated, and interpreted through contemporary theater in two Pacific contexts: Aotearoa and Rapa Nui. Maori and Samoan theater practitioners in Aotearoa have developed theatrical forms and processes based on 2

cultural values and their own epistemologies that, in turn, integrate with European theater techniques, creating innovative approaches. In Rapa Nui there is a general reluctance in the performing arts to deviate from 'tradition'. The different emphasis placed on the re-creation of 'tradition' in these comparative contexts has led to very different artistic possibilities. This difference is based on the fact that in Aotearoa indigenous theater production is supported by theater education, while in Rapa Nui this possibility does not yet exist. The indigenous theater approach in Aotearoa could serve as a source of inspiration for contemporary Rapanui theater production where a variety of cultural influences and techniques can converge.

2. RECEIVED

From Nicole Haley, Department of Pacific Affairs, Australian National University, , Australia:

AMANDA, H.A., MILLER, JEREMY & SCHMIDT, ADRIANA. 2020. Preparing for the Referendum: Research into the Bougainville Agreement Telephone Information Hotline. Discussion Paper 2020/2. Canberra: Department of Pacific Affairs, ANU.

FISHER, WILLIAM & FIRTH, STEWART. 2020. Decolonising American Micronesia. Working Paper 2020/4. Canberra: Department of Pacific Affairs, ANU.

MAY, R.J. 2020. Politics in 2017-20: From O'Neill to Marape. Discussion Paper. 2020/3. Canberra: Department of Pacific Affairs, ANU.

PANTZ, PIERRE-CHRISTOPHE. 2020. Self-determination and Electoral Geography in : Political Stasis or Independence? Working Paper 2020/5. Canberra: Department of Pacific Affairs, ANU.

3. NEW BOOKS

[These books can't be purchased from the CPAS. Please send your enquiries directly to the publishers. Not all the books in this section are strictly new, but those that are not, were not before listed in the Oceania Newsletter.]

GENERAL

BARGATZKY, THOMAS. 2019. Mana, Macht und Mythen: Tradition und Moderne in Australien und Ozeanien. Baden-Baden: Academia. 167 pages. ISBN: 978-3-89665-798-5 (pb). Review: Anthropos, 115(2), 2020: 549-551 (by H. Mückler).

"We should avoid the disrespect involved in giving mythic and religious facts less importance than they actually have in the life of non-Western indigenous peoples. This book deals with mythologic ideas which inhere in the ritual reproduction of the body politic in the actions of contemporary peoples in Australia and Oceania who still depend on the functioning of family and clan. By ritual fusion and compartmentalization, they successfully manage to live in the modern world without abandoning certain essential elements of their pre-European religious and civic cultures. By expediently switching codes, they can continue to act according to the rules of traditional society and perform as citizens of the contemporary world. The conception of myth as a rational way to explain the universe by rendering it meaningful is a necessary prerequisite for our understanding of the ways of peoples whose cultures are rooted in the past but who can perform successfully in the modern world.

Contents (concise): Vorwort: 1. Einleitung; 2. Ikonizität und mythische Ontologie; 3. Australien und Ozeanien: Allgemeine Einführung; 4. Australien und Ozeanien: Ethnografische Grundlagen; 5. Darstellungsräume des Mythischen: Liturgien; 6. Mythenarten: Fabeln, esoterische Herkunftsmythen und Charta-Mythen; 7. Mythenformen: Vegetative Kosmogonien; 8. Mythenformen: Generative Kosmogonien; 9. Mythos heute: Christianisierung und Inkulturation; 10. Geschichte wird Mythos; 11. Epilog: Hat mythische Weltanschauung eine Zukunft? Bibliografie." 3

Beginning: Inhaltsverzeichnis (extensive), Vorwort and Einleitung.

BEN-MESSAHEL, SALHIA & LORRE-JOHNSON, CHRISTINE (eds). 2018. Unsettling Oceania. Commonwealth Essays and Studies, 41(1). Retrieved 14 January 2021 from: https://journals.openedition.org/ces/371. Reviews: Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 55(6), 2020: 871-872: by P. Fresno-Calleja).

"[T]he value of this issue lies both in the strength of the individual discussions and in their collective engagement with a number of pressing topics which affect the region as a whole. Ball applies an oceanic perspective to Tim Winton's Breath, reading it as 'a climate-change fiction' (27), while Heim focuses on the search for ecological democracy in the work of Chamorro poet Craig Santos Perez and a range of Fijian creative initiatives. Starr explores nuclear imperialism in the work of Marshallese poet Kathy Jetñil-Kijiner, as does Hurley in her analysis of James George's Ocean Roads through the notion of the 'nuclear uncanny'. The uncanny reappears in White's ecospectral approach to Kim Scott's That Deadman Dance and Herbillon's discussion of Michelle de Kretser's The Lost Dog, probing issues of un/settlement, un/belonging, national identity, and hybridity. These concepts are also pivotal in Hisatake's reading of Albert Wendt's dystopian novel Black Rainbow, in Baisneé's analysis of Selina Tusitala Marsh's poetry collection Fast Talking PI, and in Giffard- Foret's exploration of the work and artistic legacy of Indigenous Australian artist Albert Namatjira. Thus, the issue effectively brings together valuable research that showcases the dynamism, depth, and diversity of the various artistic expressions coming from Oceania.

Articles: Part I. Disturbed Australian Spaces: 1. Disturbed Australian Spaces: Introduction, by Salhia Ben-Messahel; 2. The New Historical Novel: Putting Mid-Twentieth-Century Australia into Perspective, by Nicholas Birns; 3. 'The Shimmering Edge', Surfing, Risk and Climate Change in Tim Winton's Breath, by John Clement Ball; 4. Settling Scores: Albert Namatjira's Legacy, by Paul Giffard-Foret; 5. Absent Others, Asian-Australian Discontinuities in Michelle de Kretser's The Lost Dog, by Marie Herbillon; 6. 'It's Ok, We're safe here': The Karrabing Film Collective and Colonial Histories in Australia, by Maggie Wander; 7. Haunted Histories, Animate Futures: Recovering Noongar Knowledge through Kim Scott's That Deadman Dance, by Laura A. White; Part II. Unsettling Oceania, 250 Years Later: 8. Unsettling Oceania, 250 Years Later: Introduction, by Christine Lorre-Johnston; 9. Revisiting the Settler Colonial Story in Albert Wendt's Black Rainbow, by Kara Hisatake; 10. The Nuclear Uncanny in Oceania, by Jessica Hurley; 11. 'I'm Niu Voices': Selina Tusitala Marsh's Poetic Re-Imagining of Pacific Literature, by Valérie Baisnée; 12. Paradise and Apocalypse: Critiques of Nuclear Imperialism in Kathy Jetñil-Kijiner's Iep Jaltok, by Marlo Starr; 13. How (not) to Globalize Oceania: Ecology and Politics in Contemporary Pacific Island Performance Arts, by Otto Heim."

BLAGG, HARRY, TULICH, TAMARA, WILLIAMS, ROBIN, MUTCH, RAEWYN, MAY, SUZIE EDWARD, BADRY, DOROTHY & STEWART, MICHELLE. 2021 (December 2020). Decolonising Justice for Aboriginal Youth with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders. 210 pages. ISBN: 978-0367351090 (hb) and 978-0429325526 (eb).

"This book reflects multidisciplinary and cross-jurisdictional analysis of issues surrounding Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD) and the criminal justice system, and the impact on Aboriginal children, young people, and their families. This book provides the first comprehensive and multidisciplinary account of FASD and its implications for the criminal justice system - from prevalence and diagnosis to sentencing and culturally secure training for custodial officers. Situated within a 'decolonising' approach, the authors explore the potential for increased diversion into Aboriginal community-managed, on-country programmes, enabled through innovation at the point of first contact with the police, and non-adversarial, needs-focussed courts. Bringing together advanced thinking in criminology, Aboriginal justice issues, law, paediatrics, social work, and Indigenous mental health and well-being, the book is grounded in research undertaken in Australia, Canada, and . Exploring how, far from providing solutions to FASD, the mainstream criminal justice system increases the likelihood of adverse outcomes for children with FASD and their families, this innovative book will be of great value to researchers and students worldwide interested in criminal and social justice, criminology, youth justice, social work, and education."

4

DOUSSET, LAURENT. 2018. Pour une anthropologie de l'incertitude. Paris: CNRS Editions. 377 pages. ISBN: 978-2-271-08930-4 (pb). Reviews: Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes (2/151), 2020: 317-319 (by M. Collins); L'Homme, (229), 2019: 195-197 (by B. Formoso).

"Uncertainty is a concept little worked out in the social sciences, even though human existence must constantly contend with the unforeseen, adversity and error. In the past, ethnology has mainly been concerned with recording the rules, customs and prescriptions defining the normative conditions for living together. In doing so, social intelligibility was nourished by the expectations of routine, a very relative normality, and the illusions of strict social control. Laurent Dousset proposes to break with this approach by studying 'unexpected social facts', taken from the rich ethnographic thesaurus that he has built up over the course of his studies among the Aborigines of the desert of Western Australia and among the inhabitants of the region of Port Sandwich in . According to him, focusing on the analysis of events or situations that sow doubt in people's minds and call into question the relevance of institutions, allows us to observe the fabric of the social as closely as possible. In particular, it offers the possibility of grasping the most fundamental representations and values of the environment studied, to the extent that these emerge from the dialogical elicitation of the problems and the solutions envisaged" (Bernard Formoso).

"Contents: 1. Une théorie de l'incertitude est-elle possible? 2. Construire la problématique du fait social inattendu: Revisite du totémisme australien; 3. Questions de méthode: Élicitation et jugement; 4. Premier cas d'étude: Les dynamiques sorcières au Vanuatu; 5. Second cas d'étude: Race ou histoire? Le dernier des Tasmaniens; 6. Quelques réflexions finales; Références bibliographiques citées; Liste des figures; Remerciements."

Full table of contents: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/325128366_Pour_une_anthropologie_de_l'incertitude

EDWARDS, JUDITH (ed.). 2019. Psychoanalysis and Other Matters: Where Are We Now? Abingdon: Routledge. 230 pages. ISBN: 9781138494640 (pb), 9781138494626 (hb) and 9781351025980 (eb).

"Judith Edwards here calls upon international analysts, psychotherapists and other professionals to explore the concepts of 'inside' and 'outside' in psychoanalysis, boldly challenging existing boundaries. In this unique and ground-breaking collection, chapters are written by a mathematics professor, a sculptor, film-makers, anthropologists from Australia and Canada, an Ofsted inspector, a neuroscientist and two Chinese psychotherapists. The book emphasises the importance of listening across disciplinary lines, and crossing frontiers within psychoanalysis itself, by integrating psychoanalytic elements with poetry, music, literature, quantum physics, cultural studies and education. Edwards presents this original and global research with authority, showing us how these fields intersect and produce new understandings in us all that allow us to grow and benefit from new perspectives.

Contents: Acknowledgements; Dedication; Foreword by Margaret Waddell; Notes on Contributors; Introduction; 1. From Primitive Fears to the Safety of Metaphor, by Josie Oppenheim; 2. Linking Mathematics to Psychoanalysis, by Alfredo Moscardini; 3. Borderline Territory in Developmental Creativity, by Rachael Henry; 4. Future Perfect: Some reflections on the sense of anticipations in ordinary infants and psychoanalytic work, by Anne Alvarez; 5. Womba: The Yagwoia (Cannibal) Complex, by Jadram Mimica; 6. Body positive: Bodies, Minds, Trauma and Becoming Easeful, by Graham Music; 7. Matching Attunement and the Psychoanalytic Dialogue, by Eric Rayner (abridged by Sarah Sutton); 8. Inside: Sculpture, anthropology and psychoanalysis - A conversation, by Hugh Brody, Antony Gormley and Judith Edwards; 9. What you see is what you get: Observation, As opposed to inspection, As a means of organisational change, by Sarah Sutton; 10. The Right Start in Life: The politics of learning and mental health in schools, by Mick Megee and Lucy Alexander; 11. The Mourning Process of Ancient Chinese Women since the 11th century Song Dynasty: Cultural Influence and Universality, by Dr. Ying Xue and Wing-kwong Ng; 12. Literature, psychoanalysis, chaos theory: Iteration, re-iteration, recursion, by Graham Shulman; 13. Looking after the Future: Conversations with Central Australian Indigenous Thinkers, by Ute Eickelkamp; 14. Where are we now? How do we look and what do we see? by Judith Edwards; Index."

5

GOODMAN, GRANT K. MOOS, FELIX (eds). 2019. The and Japan in the Western Pacific: Micronesia and Papua New Guinea. First published in 1981 by Westview Press [after being an interim report of the University of Kansas] Abingdon: Routledge. 289 pages. ISBN: 978-0-367- 29696-4 (hb). Reviews: Naval War College Review, 34(4), 1981: 111-112 (by J.M. Siracusa); Pacific Affairs, 55(1), 1982: 168 (by R.W. Gale); Pacific Affairs, 93(3), 2020: 700-702 (by D. Fazzino).

"The interrelationships of the United States and Japan with the Federated States of Micronesia, a US dependency, and Papua New Guinea, a newly independent nation, are the focus of this study. The authors demonstrate that dependence does not by any means automatically terminate by virtue of a legal change in political status. To a surprising extent, the Federated States of Micronesia (the last UN trusteeship) and independent Papua New Guinea depend for their very survival on the United States and Japan. The authors point out that the interests of the United States and Japan in this region too often - and unnecessarily - operate in isolation from one another and in direct conflict. Cooperative US-Japanese efforts are vital in this area; whatever plans are made for the region, they must be island-specific, culturally congruent, politically sensitive, and economically viable.

Contents: Maps; Photographs; Foreword; Preface; 1. Introduction; 2. An Historical Overview: Micronesia and Papua New Guinea; 3. Micronesia under American Rule, 1944-1978: Change and Persistence; 4. Papua New Guinea under Australian Rule and after: The Shock of Independence; 5. Papua New Guinea: Issues and Policies in Economic Development; 6. Micronesia: Issues and Policies in Economic Development; 7. Japanese Policies and Perspectives in Micronesia and Papua New Guinea; 8. Conclusion; Index."

"Topics discussed include: the impacts of nuclear testing in Micronesia, food security issues (including repeated calls in the book for the development of the fisheries industry as well as subsistence agriculture), issues of dependency and development, colonialism, language and education, resource extraction, nationalism, tourism, war, and conflict. These various topics are easily accessible as the index is well put together, allowing for researchers, academics, and policymakers to mine the book for historical information that they may find valuable in conducting their own work." (by David Fazzino, Pacific Studies).

HOKOWHITU, BRENDAN, MORETON-ROBINSON, AILEEN, TUHIWAI-SMITH, LINDA, ANDERSEN, CHRIS & LARKIN, STEVE (eds). 2021 (December 2020). Routledge Handbook of Critical Indigenous Studies. Abingdon: Routledge. 632 pages. ISBN: 978-1138341302 (hb) and 978-0429440229 (eb).

"This handbook contributes to the re-centring of Indigenous knowledges, providing material and ideational analyses of social, political, and cultural institutions and critiquing and considering how Indigenous peoples situate themselves within, outside, and in relation to dominant discourses, dominant postcolonial cultures and prevailing Western thought. This book will be of interest to scholars with an interest in Indigenous peoples across Literature, History, Sociology, Critical Geographies, Philosophy, Cultural Studies, Postcolonial Studies, Native Studies, Maori Studies, Hawaiian Studies, Native American Studies, Indigenous Studies, Race Studies, Queer Studies, Politics, Law, and Feminism.

Contents: List of figures; List of contributors; Acknowledgements; Introduction, by Brendan Hokowhitu; PART I. Disciplinary knowledge and epistemology: 1. The institutional and intellectual trajectories of Indigenous Studies in North America: Harnessing the 'NAISA Effect', by Chris Andersen; 2. Ricochet: It's not where you land; it's how far you fly, by Alice Te Punga Somerville; 3. Multi-generational Indigenous feminisms: From F word to what Ifs, by Kim Anderson; 4. Against crisis epistemology, by Kyle Whyte; 5. Matariki and the decolonisation of time, by Rangi Matamua; 6. Indigenous women writers in unexpected places, by Lisa Kahaleole Hall; 7. Critical Indigenous methodology and the problems of history: Love and death beyond boundaries in Victorian British Columbia, by David A. Chang; 8. Decolonising psychology: Self-determination and social and emotional well-being, by Pat Dudgeon; 9. Colours of creation, by Nalani Wilson- Hokowhitu; PART II. Indigenous theory and method: 10. The emperor's 'new' materialisms: Indigenous materialisms and disciplinary colonialism, by Brendan Hokowhitu; 11. Intimate encounters Aboriginal labour stories and the violence of the colonial archive, by Natalie Harkin; 12. 6

Maku Ano e Hanga Toku Nei Whare: I myself shall build my house, by Leonie Pihama; 13. On the politics of Indigenous translation: Listening to Indigenous peoples in and on their own terms, by Dale Turner; 14. Auntie's bundle: Conversation and research methodologies with Knowledge Gifter Sherry Copenace, by Sherry Copenace, Jaime Cidro, Anna Johnson and Kim Anderson; 15. When nothingness revokes certainty: A Maori speculation, by Carl Mika; 16. Vital earth/vibrant earthworks/living earthworks vocabularies, by Chadwick Allen; 17. 'To be a good relative means being a good relative to everyone': Indigenous feminisms is for everyone, by Jennifer Denetdale; 18. 'Objectivity' and repatriation: Pulling on the colonisers' tale, by Clayton Dumont; PART III. Sovereignty: 19. Incommensurable sovereignties: Indigenous ontology matters, by Aileen Moreton- Robinson; 20. Mana Maori motuhake: Maori concepts and practices of sovereignty, by Margaret Mutu; 21. He Ali'i Ka 'Aina, Ua Mau Kona Ea: Land is the chief, long may she reign, by Kamanamaikalani Beamer; 22. Relational accountability in Indigenous governance: Navigating the doctrine of distrust in the Osage Nation, by Jean Dennison; 23. Ellos Deatnu and post-state Indigenous feminist sovereignty, by Rauna Kuokkanen; 24. Striking back: The 1980s Aboriginal art movement and the performativity of sovereignty, by Crystal McKinnon; 25. Communality as everyday Indigenous sovereignty in Oaxaca, Mexico, by Isabel Altamirano-Jiménez; 26. American Indian sovereignty versus the United States, by Robert J. Miller; PART IV. Political economies, ecologies, and technologies: 27. A story about the time we had a global pandemic and how it affected my life and work as a critical Indigenous scholar, by Linda Tuhiwai Smith; 28. Once were Maoists: Third World currents in Fourth World anticolonialism, Vancouver, 1967-1975, by Glen Sean Coulthard; 29. Resurgent kinships: Indigenous relations of well-being vs. humanitarian health economies, by Dian Million (Tanana); 30. Indigenous environmental justice: Towards an ethical and sustainable future, by Deborah McGregor; 31. Diverse Indigenous environmental identities: Maori resource management innovations, by Maria Bargh; 32. The ski or the wheel? Foregrounding Sámi technological Innovation in the Arctic region and challenging its invisibility in the history of humanity, by May-Britt Öhman; 33. The Indigenous digital footprint, by Hemi Whaanga and Paora Mato; PART V. Bodies, performance, and praxis: 34. Identity is a poor substitute for relating: Genetic ancestry, critical polyamory, property, and relations, by Kim TallBear; 35. Indigeneity and performance, by Stephanie Nohelani Teves; 36. Indigenous insistence on film, by Jo Smith; 37. The politics of language in Indigenous cinema, by Theodore C. Van Alst, Jr.; 38. Entangled histories and transformative futures: Indigenous sport in the 21st century, by Fa'anofo Lisaclaire Uperesa; 39. Raranga as healing methodology: Body, place, and making, by Tawhanga Nopera; 40. Becoming knowledgeable: Indigenous embodied praxis, by Simone Ulalka Tur; 41. Nyuragil - playing the 'game', by John Maynard; 42. Academic and STEM success: Pathways to Indigenous sovereignty, by Michelle M. Hogue; 43. Aboriginal child as knowledge producer: Bringing into dialogue Indigenist epistemologies and culturally responsive pedagogies for schooling, by Lester-Irabinna Rigney."

HERMANN, AYMERIC, VALENTIN, FRÉDÉRIQUE, SAND, CHRISTOPHE & NOLET, EMILIE (eds). 2020. Networks and Monumentality in the Pacific: Proceedings of the 28th UISPP World Congress, 4-9 June 2018, Paris, France, Volume 7, Session 38. Oxford: Archaeopress. 104 pages. ISBN: 978-1-78969-715-5 (pb) and 978-1-78969-716-2 (pdf). Retrieved 18 December 2020 from: http://www.archaeopress.com/ArchaeopressShop/Public/download.asp?id={AE0A52AA-77BA- 4758-8278-87D24F9738A8}.

"The sessions in Paris were dedicated to monumental constructions and to complex exchange networks in the Pacific. Both topics have been extensively commented on and described by indigenous experts, explorers, missionaries, and scholars over the last two centuries, however these have been made famous only for the most impressive examples such as the statues of Rapa Nui (Easter Island) or the kula exchange system of the Trobriand Islands. Some of the latest research on these key aspects of Pacific islands societies are made available in this volume to researchers focusing on the region, but also to a more global scientific community and to the general public. The volume reflects the tremendous progress made in Pacific island archaeology in the last 60 years which has considerably advanced our knowledge of early Pacific island societies, the rise of traditional cultural systems, and their later historical developments from European contact onwards. Interdisciplinarity is particularly stimulating in the Pacific region, where the study of the archaeological record and of chronological sequences are often combined with other kinds of information such as ethnohistorical accounts, oral traditions, and linguistic reconstructions, in the French tradition of ethnoarchéologie and the American tradition of historical anthropology.

7

Contents: List of Figures and Tables; Author's list; Introduction, by Aymeric Hermann, Christophe Sand; 1. Vegetation cover of the megalithic site of Nan Madol (Pohnpei, Federated States of Micronesia): An assessment of its history, by Christophe Sand; 2. Stone architecture of the ancient Tongan state on Tongatapu Island, Kingdom of , by Geoffrey Clark and Phillip Parton; 3. Lithic drill points: An ethno-historic case study from Motupore Island (Papua New Guinea), by Hubert Forestier, Teppsy Beni, Henry Baills, Francois-Xavier Ricaut and Matthew G. Leavesley; 4. Development of Exchange Networks in the Western , by Peter Sheppard; 5. How to explain Polynesian Outliers' heterogeneity? by Wanda Zinger, Frédérique Valentin, James Flexner, Stuart Bedford, Florent Détroit and Dominique Grimaud-Hervé; 6. Receiving and integrating: The other side of insular mobilities: A comparative approach of integration ceremonies for and Polynesia, by Sophie Chave-Dartoen and Denis Monnerie."

IOSEFA, FETAUI, JONES, STACY HOLMA & HARRIS, ANNE (eds). 2020 (November). Wayfinding and Critical Autoethnography. Abingdon: Routledge. 238 pages. ISBN 9780367343798 (pb), 9780367343828 (hb) and 9780429325410 (eb).

"Wayfinding and Critical Autoethnography is the first critical autoethnography compilation from the global south, bringing together indigenous, non-indigenous, Pasifika, and other diverse voices which expand established understandings of autoethnography as a critical, creative methodology. The book centres around the traditional practice of 'wayfinding' as a Pacific indigenous way of being and knowing, and this volume manifests traditional knowledges, genealogies, and intercultural activist voices through critical autoethnography. The chapters in the collection reflect critical autoethnographic journeys that explore key issues such as space/place belonging, decolonizing the academy, institutional racism, neoliberalism, gender inequity, activism, and education reform. This book will be a valuable teaching and research resource for researchers and students in a wide range of disciplines and contexts. For those interested in expanding their cultural, personal, and scholarly knowledge of the global south, this volume foregrounds the vast array of traditional knowledges and the ways in which they are changing academic spaces and knowledge creation through braiding old and new. This volume is unique and timely in its ability to highlight the ways in which indigenous and allied voices from the diverse global south demonstrate the ways in which the onto- epistemologies of diverse cultures, and the work of critical autoethnography, function as parallel, and mutually informing, projects.

Contents: List of figures; List of contributors; Preface: Stars and stones in Aotearoa, by Tami Spry; Acknowledgements; Introduction: Critical Autoethnography and/as Wayfinding in the Global South, Fetaui Iosefo, by Anne Harris and Stacy Holman Jones; Section I. Wayfaring and wayfinding indigeneity in the academy: 1. Wayfinding as Pasifika, Indigenous and critical autoethnographic knowledge, by Fetaui Iosefo, Anne Harris, and Stacy Holman Jones; 2. Wayfinding Kurahuna, by Haami Hawkins; 3. Wayfinding with aiga (family) - Aiga saili manuia: Family in (re)search of peace, by Fetaui Iosefo and Aiga ethics komiti; 4. Wayfinding and decolonising time: Talanoa, activism, and critical autoethnography, by Katarina Tuinamuana and Joanne Yoo; 5. Critical autoethnographic encounters in the moana: Wayfinding the intersections of to'utangata Tonga and indigenous masculinities, by David Fa'avae. Section II. Wayfinding and way-fairness in the digital age: 6. The crooked room: Intersectional tap dancing, academic performing, and negotiating black, woman, immigrant, by Denise Chapman; 7. The neighbourhood(s) inside me: Telling stories of (un)belonging, (im)mobility, temporality and places, by Ann-Charlotte Palmgren; 8. Oceania resistance: Digital autoethnography in the Marianas Archipelago, by Sylvia C. Frain; 9. Uncovering a performative black feminist wayfinding, by Nicole M. Brown and Lisa Fay; Section III. Wayfinding in the liminal spaces: 10. Almost always clouds: Stitching a map of belonging, by Christine Rogers; 11. The North Star and the Southern Cross, by Julie Brien; 12. Retracing the footprints of a family of teacher wayfinders, by Christine Hatton; 13. Poet tree: A poetic exploration of an immigrant's journey, by Ying (Ingrid) Wang; Index."

KERLOGUE, FIONA & POSPISILOVA, DAGMAR. 2018. Collecting Experience in the 1930s: Indonesian and Pacific collections of Ružena Charlotta Urbanová in the National Museum. Photographs by Jirí Vanek. Translation by Valerie Talacko. Prague: National Museum Prague. 272 pages. ISBN: 978-80-7036-577-9 (hc). Review: Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde, 176(4), 2020: 587-590 (by E. Wellfelt).

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"This study focusses on the collections made by Ružena Charlotta Urbanová during her travels in the 1930s. Her journey took her through some of the islands of the Pacific [Tahiti, Bora Bora, , , Vanuatu, New Caledonia, New Zealand], as well as many parts of the Dutch East Indies, and the varied collection reflects the material produced locally at that period. It includes textiles, paintings, puppets, bark cloth, wood carving, metalwork, jewellery and basketry. Exquisite and rare items are complemented by souvenirs made for tourists and mundane objects bought in the local market. The book explores the history of the collection, as well as considering how the material relates to Urbanová's life and work. The study shows that Urbanová, like many others, valued and preserved a whole range of material, not just prestigious art objects. As she travelled, she gained experience and gathered objects which told of that experience. The collection thus speaks as much of human experience as it does of art."

MORRIS, NANCY J. & BENEDETTO, ROBERT. 2019. Na Kahu: Portraits of Native Hawaiian Pastors at Home and Abroad, 1820-1900. : University of Hawai'i Press. 318 pages. ISBN: 978- 0824875398 (hb). Review: The Journal of Pacific History, 55(4), 2020: 551-552 (by L.M. Ratnapalan).

"Tracing the lives of some two hundred Native Hawaiian teachers, preachers, pastors, and missionaries, Na Kahu provides new historical perspectives of the indigenous ministry in Hawai'i. These Christian emissaries were affiliated first with the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, and later with the Hawaiian Evangelical Association. By the mid-1850s literate and committed Hawaiians were sailing to far reaches of the Pacific to join worldwide missionary endeavors. Geographical locations ranged from remote mission stations in Hawai'i, including the Hansen's disease community at Kalaupapa; the Marquesan Islands; Micronesia; fur trade settlements in Northwest America; and the gold fields of California. In their reports and letters the pastors and missionaries pour out their hopes and discouragements, their psychological and physical pain, and details of their everyday lives. The first part of the book presents the biographies of nineteen young Hawaiians, studying as messengers of Christianity in the remote New England town of Cornwall, Connecticut, along with 'heathen' from other lands. The second part - the core of the book - moves to Hawai'i, tracing the careers of pastors and missionaries, as well as recognizing their intellectual and political endeavors. There is also a discussion of the educational institutions established to train an indigenous ministry and the gradual acceptance of ordained Hawaiians as equals to their western counterparts. Included in an appendix is the little-known story of Christian ali'i, Hawaiian chiefs, both men and women, who contributed to the mission by lending their authority to the cause and by contributing land and labor for the construction of churches. The biographies reveal the views of pastors on events leading to the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom, which brought about great divisions between the haole and Hawaiian ministry. Many Hawaiian pastors who sided with the new Provisional Government and then the Republic, were expelled by their own congregations loyal to the monarchy. During the closing years of the century, alternate forms of Christianity emerged, and those pastors drawn to these syncretic faiths add their perspectives to the book. Perhaps the most illuminating biographies are those in which the pastors give voice to a faith that blends traditional Hawaiian values with an emerging ecumenical Christianity.

Contents: Foreword; Acknowledgments; Acronyms and Abbreviations; Note on Personal Name Forms and Geographical Terms; Introduction; Part I. Students of the Foreign Mission School, Cornwall, Connecticut; Part II. The Native Hawaiian Ministry; Appendix: Christian Ali'i of the Early Mission; Selected Bibliography; Index; About the Authors."

NEVY, G.N. & DAVIS, GEOFFREY V. (eds). 2021 (Copyright). Indigeneity and Nation. Abingdon: Routledge. 178 pages. ISBN: 978-0367263232 (pb), 978-0367245313 (hb) and 978-0429291838 (pb). Published October 2020.

"The book, the third in a five-volume series, deals with the two key concepts of indigeneity and nation of indigenous people from all the continents of the world. With contributions from renowned scholars, activists and experts across the globe, it looks at issues and ideas of indigeneity, nationhood, nationality, State, identity, selfhood, constitutionalism, and citizenship in Africa, North America, New Zealand, Pacific Islands and Oceania, India, and Southeast Asia from philosophical, cultural, historical and literary points of view.

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Contents: Notes on Contributors; Preface; Acknowledgements; Introduction, by G.N. Devy; 1. Indigeneity in Southern Africa, by Brendon Nicholls; 2. Oceanic Nations: New Zealand and the Pacific Islands Region, by Paloma Fresno-Calleja; 3. Storied Nationhood: Literature, Constitutionalism, and Citizenship in Indigenous North America, by Katja Sarkowsky; 4. Finding Nation: The Nation and the State in F. Sionil Jose's Mass and Edwin Thumboo's A Third Map, by Lily Rose Tope; 5. Indigenous Peoples and Nation Interface in India, by Virginius Xaxa and Roluah Puia; 6. African Indigeneity: The Southern African Challenge, by Yvette Hutchison; 7. Two Poets of the Pacific: Hone Tuwhare and Haunani-Kay Trask, by Robert Sullivan; Index."

SHERRIS, ARI & PEYTON, JOY KREEFT (eds). 2019. Teaching Writing to Children in Indigenous Languages: Instructional Practices from Global Contexts. Routledge: Abingdon. 312 pages. ISBN: 978-1-138-48535-8 (hc), 978-0-367-66175-5 (pb) and 978-1-351-04967-2 (eb). Review: Language and Linguistics of Melanesia, 39, 2021: 1-5 (by C.A. Volker).

"This volume brings together studies of instructional writing practices and the products of those practices from diverse Indigenous languages and cultures. By analyzing a rich diversity of contexts - Finland, Ghana, , Mexico, Papua New Guinea, and more - through biliteracy, complexity, and genre theories, this book explores and demonstrates critical components of writing pedagogy and development. Because the volume focuses on Indigenous languages, it questions center-margin perspectives on schooling and national language ideologies, which often limit the number of Indigenous languages taught, the domains of study, and the age groups included.

Contents (Pacific chapters): 2. Early and Emergent Literacy Practices as a Foundation for Hawaiian Language Medium Education, by Candace Kaleimamoowahinekapu Galla and William "Pila" H. Wilson; 5. Emergent Writing in Notsi in Papua New Guinea, by Gertrude Nicholas; 6. Emergent Writing in Numanggang in Papua New Guinea, by Samuel Saleng and Gertrude Nicholas; 10. Early Writing in Nungon in Papua New Guinea, by Hannah S. Sarvasy and Eni Ögate."

AUSTRALIA

AKERMAN, KIM. 2020. From the Bukarikara: The Lore of the Southwest Kimberley through the Art of Butcher Joe Nangan. Perth: University of Western Australia Press. 216 pages. With 62 images of pencil sketches, some with watercolour, and 19 images of engraved pearl shells. ISBN: 978- 1760801021 (pb). Review: Oceania, 90(3), 2020: 334 (by P. Sutton).

"Butcher Joe Nangan was one of those charismatic people who exercised a most profound impact on all who met him. Having spent his life acquiring the ritual knowledge and lore, not only of his own Nyikina and Walmajarri forbears but also that pertaining to the lands of his neighbours, Nangan believed that he could, through his art; present his world to a wider audience. With pencil, paint and pocket knife Nangan deftly depicted the artefacts, legends and history of his country. The legends that Nangan relates and illustrates provide a traditional explanation on how his world came to be. Nangan also records the often-brutal history of the frontier experience and the clash of cultures as Europeans began to encroach on Aboriginal lands. Possibly one of the most prolific of Australia's Indigenous artists Nangan left a record unparalleled of a world at the cusp - a world that would soon fade and vanish as time moved on.

Contents: Foreword, by Janet Holmes à Court; 1. A brief history of a life well lived; 2. The works on paper; 3. The Pelican Nurlu; 4. Spirit folk; 5. Pictures of country; 6. Transformations and the creation of species; 7. History revealed; 8. The creation of heavenly signs; 9. Natural history; 10. Records of material culture; 11. The pearl shells."

ATKINSON-PHILLIPS, ALISON. 2019. Survivor Memorials: Remembering Trauma and Loss in Contemporary Australia. Perth: University of Western Australia. 336 pages. ISBN: 978- 1760800260 (pb). Review: Australian Historical Studies, 51(4), 2020: 503-504 (by M. McFadzean).

"This is a book about memorials - specifically about a new type of memorial that commemorates experiences of survivors. These new memorials acknowledge loss and trauma that people have lived through, rather than died because of. It is also a book about why people feel the need to remember such difficult experiences. As such, it combines a topic that has strong scholarly interest with human 10

stories of pain and resilience from Australia's recent history. The first half of the book outlines the emergence of this new genre of commemoration in three stages: early explorations through community and public art projects in the 1980s and 90s; the adoption of traditional memorial forms from the late 1990s; and the creation of government-funded and commissioned memorials as part of the adoption of transitional justice practices of symbolic reparations since the mid 2000s. Alongside international interest in the field of memory studies, there is local interest in the stories behind these memorial projects. The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has already been the catalyst for a number of new memorial projects, and has produced clashes between survivors and church groups about the best ways to acknowledge their suffering. This book, therefore, is timely, as it offers an opportunity for people to learn from past experiences. The book includes six case study chapters, each of which tell the story of the development of a different Australian memorial. The background to each of these projects is a heart-breaking story of loss and trauma, but many of the stories of the memorial development are stories of resilience, and of unlikely friendships and connections."

Subjects: "Hay Girls Institution (Hay, N.S.W.) -- History. | Monuments -- Australia -- History -- Case studies. | Stolen generations (Australia) | Black Saturday bushfires, 2009. | Gays -- Violence against -- Australia | Abused children -- Australia -- History -- 20th century. | Immigrants -- Housing -- Victoria -- Sringvale -- History. | Sculpture. | Historic sites. | Australia -- History. | Australian" (National Library of Australia Catalogue).

FOLEY, JEAN DUNCAN. 2019. Healings and Burials at Sydney's North Head: Aboriginal People c.1788, Quarantined People 1835-1924. Sydney: Jean Duncan Foley. 170 pages. 978-0646809038 (pb). Reviews: Health and History, 22(2), 2020: 100-103 (by P. Hobbins); North Head Sanctuary Foundation Newsletter, (138), 2020: 2 (by Kaye Lee).

"Describing North Head as both a place of healing and a burial island, (based on both Aboriginal oral history and the sixteen burial sites discovered there) Foley uses the customs of the Eora people to show what practices Aborigines may have used at North Head to minimize pain, heal and finally bury or cremate their loved ones. Details of the Koradji medicine men working their magic, healing ceremonies observed by Watkin Tench and David Collins, the Be-an-ny women's method of pain relief, and burial and cremation practices of the Eora all make for an interesting first chapter. The following chapters, initially outline quarantine practice before the use of North Head, then give a detailed history of quarantine at North Head, the role of the hospital ships Harmony and Faraway, the three distinct burial grounds and the virulent epidemics that contributed to their use until 1925. The various cases detailed give a bleak and dismal picture of what sufferers had to endure, particularly those from Sydney town in the smallpox epidemic - victims, dead or alive, rowed out to North Head with their loved ones, homes and clothes burnt, the lives of many cut short" (Kaye Lee, North Head Sanctuary Foundation Newsletter).

GILLEN, FRANCIS. 2017. Gillen's Modest Record: His Journal of the Spencer-Gillen Anthropological Expedition across Australia, 1901-02. Edited by Philip Jones. Adelaide: Friends of the State Library of South Australia. 483 pages. ISBN: 978-1876154806 (pb), 978-1876154813 (hb) and Review: Aboriginal History, 43, 2019: 165-167 (by R.G. Kimber).

"An illuminating account of an extraordinary voyage of intellectual discovery. Francis Gillen and Baldwin Spencer's expedition through the cultures and territories of a dozen Aboriginal societies at the turn of the twentieth century gave them anthropological insights that lead to a fresh understanding of Aboriginal religion, art and relationships to land. Philip Jones has meticulously edited the journal, adding unpublished photographs, an introduction and an afterword."

"Philip Jones takes the title of this book from Gillen's original title for his account: 'Camp Jottings. A modest record of our doings, day by day'. 'Gillen's Modest Record' was originally written 'to give his wife some idea of his day by day activities', according to his grandson Dr Robert Gillen (R.S. Gillen, Gillen's Diary: v) " (R.G. Kimber, Aboriginal History).

Subjects: "Gillen, F. J. (Francis James), 1855-1912 -- Diaries. | Spencer and Gillen Expedition, (1901-1902) | Aboriginal Australians -- Australia, Central -- Social life and customs. | Aboriginal Australians -- History. | Anthropology -- Australia. | Magic and sorcery. | Ceremonies. | Material 11

culture. | Trade and exchange. | Wakaya people (C16) (NT SE53-15) | Initiation - Tooth avulsion. | Social organisation - Kinship - Systems. | Kaytetye / Kaytej people (C13) (NT SF53-06) | Health - Treatments - Traditional - Clever people. | Ceremonies - Initiation. | Body - Decoration. | Binbinga people (N138) (NT SE53-03) | Social organisation - Kinship - Kinship terms. | Mara / Marra people (N112) (NT SD53-11) | Gender relations - Polygamy. | Jingulu / Djingili / Jingili people (C22) (NT SE53-06) | Costume and clothing - Hair dressing. | Art - Subjects - Ancestral / totemic beings. | Ceremonies - Rain making. | Gender relations - Marriage. | Death - Mortuary customs. | Religion - Totemism. | Wambaya / Wampaya language (C19) (NT SE53-11) | Arrernte / Aranda people (C8) (NT SG53-02) | Death - Mortuary / funeral ceremonies - Tree and platform burial. | Religion - Dreaming. | Stories and motifs. | Warumungu people (C18) (NT SE53-10) | Australia -- History. | Australian" (National Library of Australia Catalogue).

HOLLAND, ALISON. 2019. Breaking the Silence: Aboriginal Defenders and the Settler State, 1905-1939. Melbourne: Melbourne University Press. 362 pages. ISBN: 978-0522875409 (pb), 978-0522875393 (hb) & 978-0522875416 (eb). Review: Australian Historical Studies, 51(4), 501-502 (by S. Furphy).

"Breaking the Silence recovers the conflicted politics of Aboriginal affairs in the first decades of the twentieth century. From 1905, when the report of the controversial Roth Royal Commission in Western Australia was made known to the public, to the eve of World War II, the condition, status and treatment of Aboriginal Australians were leading social questions that generated much discontent and underscored the awakening of a national conscience. Styled the 'new public', defenders lobbied governments to develop policies to ensure viable Aboriginal futures. In charting aspects of this politics, Alison Holland uncovers the defenders' programs for reform and the responses of governments to them. She shows how the consternation of the defenders was disproportionate to political will. Governments didn't listen or hear. They viewed the issues and solutions in different ways. Where defenders saw a humanitarian crisis, governments identified a colour problem in White Australia and developed policies to eradicate it. Breaking the Silence shows that there was no 'great Australian silence' on this question in the first half of the twentieth century. While the history books may have been silent, the politics on the ground, in the press, the auditorium, parliament, university, church and mission were anything but. Holland asks why this was so. What form did this politics take, what was at stake and what were the outcomes? In answering these questions the book provides important historical context for the consternation and debates still being had in the Australian polity over Aboriginal affairs.

Alison Holland is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Modern History, Politics and International Relations at Macquarie University, where she specialises in Australian and Indigenous history. Her work focuses on questions of rights and humanitarianism, feminism, race, governance, policy and citizenship in Australian history broadly. Her book Just Relations: The Story of Mary Bennett's Crusade for Aboriginal Rights (UWA Publishing, 2015) was short-listed for the NSW Premier's Australian History prize in 2016."

LEES, PATTIE & LEES, ADAM C. 2020. A Question of Colour: My Journey to Belonging. Broome: Magabala Books. 350 pages. ISBN: 978-1925936513 (pb).

"The removal of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children from their families remains a dark chapter in Australia's history. Pattie Lees was just ten-years-old when she and her four siblings were separated from their mother on the grounds of neglect and placed into State care. Believing she was being shipped and exiled to Africa, Pattie was ultimately fated to spend the rest of her childhood on the island once dubbed 'Australia's Alcatraz', Palm Island Aboriginal Settlement, off the coast of Queensland. The book provides a first-hand account of Pattie's experiences as a 'fair-skinned Aboriginal' during Australia's assimilationist policy era and recounts her survival following a decade of sexual, physical and emotional abuse as a Ward of the State. A Question of Colour is a deeply moving and powerful testimony to the resilience of a young girl, her identity and her journey to belong."

MANGOLAMARA, SYLVESTER, KARADANA, LILY, OOBAGOOMA, JANET, WOOLAGOODJA, DONNY & KARADADA, JACK. 2018. Nyara Pari Kala Niragu (Gaambera): Gadawara Ngyaran-gada (Wunambal): Inganinja Gubadjoongana (Woddordda): We Are Coming to See You. Compiled by Kim Doohan. Fremantle: Dambimangari Aboriginal Corporation and Wunambal 12

Gaambera Aboriginal Corporation in cooperation with Fremantle Press. 264 pages. ISBN: 978- 0648424703 (pb). Review: Geographical Research, 58(4), 2020: 424-426 (by S. Suchet-Pearson).

"The Wanjina-Wunggurr Traditional Owners wanted a book that would help preserve their traditions and culture, in particular their rock art and stone arrangements to encourage understanding and respect of them as owners of their culture and country. Having worked with DAC [Dambimangari Aboriginal Corporation] on a similar project, we were pleased to collaborate with their creative team to develop a comprehensive and beautiful publication" (Fremantle Press).

"When we read this book we know that we are reading the stories from our old people and we feel confident that the stories are the right ones. This book is not whitefellas telling a story but our old people leaving their memory for us to follow so we can be strong in the future and know our country" (Cathy Goonack, Chairperson, Wunambal Gaambera Aboriginal Corporation).

MUECKE, STEPHEN & ROE, PADDY. 2020. The Children's Country: Creation of a Goolarabooloo Future in North-west Australia. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers. 252 pages. ISBN: 978-1-78661-548-0 (hb), 978-1-78661-648-7 (pb) and 978-1-78661-549-7 (eb).

"In North-west Australia, between 2009 and 2013, a major Indigenous-environmentalist alliance waged a successful campaign to stop a huge industrial development, a $45 billion liquefied gas plant proposed by Woodside and its partners. The Western Australian government and key Indigenous institutions also pushed hard for this, making the custodians of the Country, the Goolarabooloo, an embattled minority. This experimental ethnography documents the Goolarabooloo's knowledge of Country, their long history of struggle for survival, and the alliances that formed to support them. Written in a fictocritical style, it introduces a new 'multirealist' kind of analysis that focuses on institutions (Indigenous or European), their spheres of influence, and how they organised to stay alive as alliances shifted and changed.

Contents: Acknowledgment; Introduction; Day 1. Walking; Day 2. History; Day 3 and 4. Law; Day 5. Science; Day 6. Politics; Day 7. Economics; Day 8. Art; Day 9. Back to Civilisation; Appendix: Legal Calendar; Bibliography; Index; About the Authors."

PATTERSON, ROY HENRY & JONES, JENNIFER. 2020. On Taungurung Land: Sharing History and Culture. Canberra: ANU Press. 166 pages. ISBN: 978-1760464066 (pb) and 978-1760464073 (pdf). Retrieved 18 December 2020 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/OTL.2020.

"On Taungurung Land: Sharing History and Culture is the first monograph to examine how the Taungurung Nation of central Victoria negotiated with protectors and pastoralists to retain possession of their own country for as long as possible. Historic accounts, to date, have treated the histories of Acheron and Mohican Aboriginal stations as preliminary to the establishment of the more famous Coranderrk on Wurundjeri land. Instead of 'rushing down the hill' to Coranderrk, this book concentrates upon the two foundational Aboriginal stations on Taungurung Country. A collaboration between Elder Uncle Roy Patterson and Jennifer Jones, the book draws upon Taungurung oral knowledge and an unusually rich historical record. This fine-grained local history and cultural memoir shows that adaptation to white settlement and the preservation of culture were not mutually exclusive. Uncle Roy shares generational knowledge in this book in order to revitalise relationships to place and establish respect and mutual practices of care for Country.

Contents: Preliminary pages; Acknowledgements; Note on terminology; Preface; Introduction: Meeting and working with Uncle Roy; Part I. Sharing Taungurung history: 1. An overview of Taungurung history since invasion; 2. Acheron Aboriginal Station: Land that 'ever should be theirs'; 3. Mohican Aboriginal Station: 'Forced miles from the spot they cherished'; 4. Breaking up Mohican Aboriginal Station: 'They got sick of being shunted around'; 5. Children of Coranderrk, 1870-86; Part II. Sharing Taungurung culture: 6. 'Knowledge cost ya nothing and is not heavy to carry around': Taungurung bush tucker, bush medicine and bushcraft; 7. 'Without culture, you've got nothing': Taungurung cultural heritage; Conclusion; Bibliography."

REID, BRIAN. 2020. Power and Protection: The Contest between the Government Residents and the Medical Protectors of the Aborigines in South Australia's Northern Territory. Casuarina: 13

Historical Society of the Northern Territory. 111 pages. ISBN: 978-0-646-81350-9 (pb). Review: Health and History, 22(2), 2020: 106-108 (by P. Martyr).

"[From 1863 until 1911, the Northern Territory was annexed to South Australia.] [H]ow do you 'protect' Indigenous Australians? The core issue in the disputes between the colonial Sout Australian and Northern Territory governments, their medical officers, and government-appointed Protectors was exactly this. Everyone thought they were acting in the Indigenous people's best interest - except that those best interests turned out to be something of a moveable feast. The one voice that you will not hear in this history of internecine warfare among governments and officials is that of the Indigenous people themselves. Read acknowledges this from the outset, but also leaves the way open for future scholarship to address it. One of the book's strengths is its exposure of the multiple interpretations of the concept of 'protection' that were floating around the colonial zeitgeist." (Philippa Martyr, Health and History).

SCRIMGEOUR, ANNE. 2020. On Red Earth Walking: The Pilbara Aboriginal Strike, Western Australia 1946-1949. Melbourne: Monash University Publishing. 510 pages. ISBN: 9781925835687 (pb). Review: Australian Historical Studies, 51(4), 2020: 499-500 (by C. Locke).

"In 1946 Aboriginal people walked off pastoral stations in Western Australia's Pilbara region, withdrawing their labour from the economically-important wool industry to demand improvements in wages and conditions. Their strike lasted three years. On Red Earth Walking is the first comprehensive account of this significant, unique, and understudied episode of Australian history. Using extensive and previously unsourced archival evidence, Anne Scrimgeour interrogates earlier historical accounts of the strike, delving beneath the strike's mythology to uncover the rich complexity of its history. The use of Aboriginal oral history places Aboriginal actors at the centre of these events, foregrounding their agency and their experiences. Scrimgeour provides a lucid examination of the system of colonial control that existed in the Pilbara prior to the strike, and a fascinating and detailed account of how these mechanisms were gradually broken down by three years of striker activism. Amid Cold-war fears of communist subversion in the north, the prominence of communists among southern supporters and the involvement of a non-Aboriginal activist, Don McLeod, complicated settler responses to the strike. This history raises provocative ideas around racial tensions in a pastoral settler economy, and examines political concerns that influenced settler responses to the strike, to create a nuanced and engaging account of this pivotal event in Australian Indigenous and labour histories.

Anne Scrimgeour has worked with Pilbara Aboriginal people over many years and has undertaken extensive research into their history. She worked with Monty Hale on his bilingual autobiography, Kurlumarniny: We Come from the Desert and has publishing articles on the Pilbara strike and the Aboriginal cooperative movement that developed from the strike."

SHELLAM, TIFFANY. 2020. Meeting the Waylo: Aboriginal Encounters in the Archipelago. Perth University of Western Australia Publishing. 271 pages. ISBN: 978-1-76080-113-7 (pb). Review: Australian Historical Studies, 51(4), 2020: 502-503 (by A. McLaren).

"Meeting the Waylo is a history of story-making about the experiences of Migeo, Boongaree and Bundle, three Indigenous Australians who were intermediaries on board maritime expeditions in the early nineteenth century. These Indigenous men travelled to the archipelagos of the north-west of Western Australia, where they became central figures in encounters between the crew and local Indigenous groups onshore. This book captures the splintering of stories by explorers, later archivists and collecting institutions. By following the footsteps and fingerprints of the archivists as well as explorers, Shellam reminds us that the archive is never a neutral storehouse for history. While explorers sometimes acknowledged the key positioning of Indigenous intermediaries in their raw archives, later refinements rendered them absent. The expedition stories of these men appear unevenly in archives as a result of archival acquisitions, dictated by changing political climates of remembering and forgetting.

Contents: Illustrations; Part I. Archiving the Archipelago: 1. Encountering the archives; Part II. Migeo Meets the Waylo: 2. Migeo; 3. Mobilising the explorers; 4. 'The ship's track in his memory'; 5. Travelling song; Part III. Boongaree in Dampier's Archipelago: 6. Boongaree; 7. 'A 14

counterpart of mirrored strangers'; 8. Bodies and talk; 9. Postscript; Part IV. Bundle at Hanover Bay: 10. Bundle; 11. Strategies and mediation; 12. Optics of encounter; 13. 'Roevial': Collectors make history; Part V. Countering History: 14. Mediating the go-betweens; 15. Navigating sameness and strangeness; 16. Counting history; Acknowledgements; Notes; Bibliography; Index."

SWANSON, HEATHER ANNE, LIE, MARIANNE ELISABETH & WEEN, GRO B. (eds). 2018. Domestication Gone Wild: Politics and Practices of Multispecies Relations. Boulder: Duke University Press. 272 pages. ISBN: 978-0-8223-7126-7 (pb) and 978-0-8223-7133-5 (cl). Reviews: Ethnos, 86(1), 2021: 189-191 (by K. Overstreet); Norsk Antropologisk Tidsskrift, 30, 2019: 286-289 (by H.B. Broch).

"The domestication of plants and animals is central to the familiar and now outdated story of civilization's emergence. Intertwined with colonialism and imperial expansion, the domestication narrative has informed and justified dominant and often destructive practices. Contending that domestication retains considerable value as an analytical tool, the contributors to Domestication Gone Wild reengage the concept by highlighting sites and forms of domestication occurring in unexpected and marginal sites, from Norwegian fjords and Philippine villages to British falconry cages and South African colonial townships. Challenging idioms of animal husbandry as human mastery and progress, the contributors push beyond the boundaries of farms, fences, and cages to explore how situated relations with animals and plants are linked to the politics of human difference - and, conversely, how politics are intertwined with plant and animal life. Ultimately, this volume promotes a novel, decolonizing concept of domestication that radically revises its Euro- and anthropocentric narrative.

Contents (Pacific chapters): 3. Dog Ears and Tails: Different Relational Ways of Being with Canines in Aboriginal Australia and Mongolia, by Natasha Fijn."

TURNBULL, PAUL. 2017. Science, Museums and Collecting the Indigenous Dead in Colonial Australia. Cham: Palgrave MacMillan. 428 pages. ISBN: 978-3-319-51873-2 (hc), 978-3-319-84766-5 (pb) and 978-3-319-51874-9 (eb). Review: Health and History, 22(2), 110-112 by E. Pacitti).

"This book draws on over twenty years' investigation of scientific archives in Europe, Australia, and other former British settler colonies. It explains how and why skulls and other bodily structures of Indigenous Australians became the focus of scientific curiosity about the nature and origins of human diversity from the early years of colonisation in the late eighteenth century to Australia achieving nationhood at the turn of the twentieth century. The last thirty years have seen the world's indigenous peoples seek the return of their ancestors' bodily remains from museums and medical schools throughout the western world. Turnbull reveals how the remains of the continent's first inhabitants were collected during the long nineteenth century by the plundering of their traditional burial places. He also explores the question of whether museums also acquired the bones of men and women who were killed in Australian frontier regions by military, armed police and settlers.

Contents: 1. Introduction: 'To What Strange Uses'; 2. European Anatomists and Indigenous Australian Bodily Remains, c. 1788-1820; 3. Skeletal Collecting Before Darwin; 4. Indigenous Remains in British Anatomical and Ethnographic Discourse, 1810-1850; 5. British Polygenists and the Indigenous Body, 1820-1880; 6. 'Rare Work for the Professors': Phrenologists and the Australian Skull, c. 1815-1860; 7. Colonial Museums and the Indigenous Dead, c. 1830-1874; 8. 'Judicious Collectors', 1870-1914; 9. 'Tales of Blood and Mummies': The Queensland Museum, 1870-1914; 10. Murdered for Science? Anthropological Collecting and Colonial Violence in Late Nineteenth Century Australia; 11. Indigenous Australians' Defence of the Ancestral Dead; 12. Repatriation and Its Critics; 13. Conclusion; Erratum to: Science, Museums and Collecting the Indigenous Dead in Colonial Australia; Bibliography; Index."

WILKIE, BENJAMIN. 2020. Gariwerd: An Environmental History of the Grampians. Melbourne: CSIRO Publishing. 148 pages. ISBN: 978-1486307685 (pb), 9781486307692 (pdf) and 978-1486307708 (ep). Review: Australian Historical Studies, 51(4), 2020: 504-505 (by S. McMaster).

"An exploration of the geological, ecological and cultural history of the Victorian Grampians. People have been visiting and living in the Victorian Grampians, also known as Gariwerd, for thousands of 15

generations. They have both witnessed and caused vast environmental transformations in and around the ranges. Gariwerd: An Environmental History of the Grampians explores the geological and ecological significance of the mountains and combines research from across disciplines to tell the story of how humans and the environment have interacted, and how the ways people have thought about the environments of the ranges have changed through time. In this new account, historian Benjamin Wilkie examines how Djabwurrung and Jardwadjali people and their ancestors lived in and around the mountains, how they managed the land and natural resources, and what kinds of archaeological evidence they have left behind over the past 20 000 years. He explores the history of European colonisation in the area from the middle of the 19th century and considers the effects of this on both the first people of Gariwerd and the environments of the ranges and their surrounding plains in western Victoria. The book covers the rise of science, industry and tourism in the mountains, and traces the eventual declaration of the Grampians National Park in 1984. Finally, it examines more recent debates about the past, present and future of the park, including over its significant Indigenous history and heritage.

Contents: Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1. The restless Earth; 2. The first people of Gariwerd; 3. Strangers in a foreign land; Colour plates; 4. Dispossession and environmental transformation; 5. Science, resources and industry; 6. The Grampians National Park; 7. Colonial legacies; Conclusion; Select bibliography; Index."

Full table of contents: https://www.publish.csiro.au/samples/TOC_Gariwerd.pdf.

MELANESIA

BAINTON, NICHOLAS A., MCDOUGALL, DEBRA, ALEXEYEFF, KALISSA & COX, JOHN (eds). 2021 (January). Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific. Canberra: ANU Press. 560 pages. ISBN: 978-1760464103 (pb) and 978-1760464110 (pdf). Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

"As we move further into the twenty-first century, we are witnessing both the global extensification and local intensification of inequality. Unequal Lives deals with the particular dilemmas of inequality in the Western Pacific. The authors focus on four dimensions of inequality: the familiar triad of gender, race and class, and the often-neglected dimension of generation. Grounded in meticulous long-term ethnographic enquiry and deep awareness of the historical contingency of these configurations of inequality, this volume illustrates the multidimensional, multiscale and epistemic nature of contemporary inequality. This collection is a major contribution to academic and political debates about the perverse effects of inequality, which now ranks among the greatest challenges of our time. The inspiration for this volume derives from the breadth and depth of Martha Macintyre's remarkable scholarship. The contributors celebrate Macintyre's groundbreaking work, which exemplifies the explanatory power, ethical force and pragmatism that ensures the relevance of anthropological research to the lives of others and to understanding the global condition.

Contents: Preliminary Pages; Preface: Scholar, Teacher, Mentor, Friend: Essays in Honour of Martha Macintyre, by Nick Bainton, Debra McDougall, Kalissa Alexeyeff and John Cox; Prologue: Pragmatism, Prescience and Principle, by Neil Maclean; 1. Unequal Lives in the Western Pacific, by Nicholas Bainton and Debra McDougall; 2. 'I Will Be Travelling to Kavieng!' Work, Labour and Inequality in New Ireland, Papua New Guinea, by Paige West and John Aini; 3. The Unequal Place of Anthropology in Cross-Disciplinary Research on Environmental Management in the Pacific and What to Do About It, by Simon Foale; 4. The Problem of the Semi-Alienable Anthropologist, by Melissa Demian; 5. Global Health, Tuberculosis and Local Health Campaigns: Reinforcing and Reshaping Health and Gender Inequalities in Lihir, Papua New Guinea, by Susan R. Hemer; 6. The Missionary's Dilemma: A Short History of Christian Marriage and its Impact upon Gender Equality in Maisin Society, by John Barker; 7. Gendered Ambition and Disappointment: Women and Men in a Vernacular Language Education Movement in Melanesia, by Debra McDougall; 8. Stingy Egalitarianism: Precarity and Jealousy at the Sisiak Settlement, Madang, Papua New Guinea, by Deborah Gewertz and Frederick Errington; 9. Inequalities of Aspiration: Class, Cargo and the Moral Economy of Development in Papua New Guinea, by John Cox; 10. Exiles and Empty Houses: Contingent Events and Their Aftermath in the Ok Tedi Hinterland, by Dan Jorgensen; 11. Transforming Inequalities and Uncertainty: Gender, Generational and Class Dimensions in the 16

Gende's Longue Durée, by Laura Zimmer-Tamakoshi; 12. From Donation to Handout: Resource Wealth and Transformations of Leadership in Huli Politics, by Michael Main; 13. Measuring Mobilities and Inequalities in Papua New Guinea's Mining Workforce, by Colin Filer; 14. Menacing the Mine: Double Asymmetry and Mutual Incomprehension in Lihir, by Nicholas Bainton; 15. Intersecting Inequalities, Moving Positionalities: An Interlude, by Margaret Jolly; Coda: A Legacy of Engaged Anthropology: Encountering Anthropology: An Interview with Martha Macintyre, by Martha Macintyre and Alex Golub; Personal Reflections and Tributes to Martha Macintyre: First Contact with Martha, by Chris Gregory; Martha and Me in the 1990s, by Bronwen Douglas; Humour, Homes and Gardens: Martha, Feminism and Anthropology, by Kalissa Alexeyeff; I First Met Martha Macintyre Twice: Or How I Became an Anthropologist, by John Cox; What Would Martha Do? Confessions of a Hypochondriac in the Field, by Michael Main; Martha, My Mentor, by Sarah Richards-Hewat; Martha: My Friend, My Role Model, by Dora Kuir-Ayius; The Work of Martha Macintyre, So Far; Contributors."

HALVAKSZ, JAMON ALEX. 2020. Gardens of Gold: Place-making in Papua New Guinea. Foreword by K. Sivaramakrishnan. Seattle: University of Washington Press. 242 pages. ISBN: 978-0295747590 (pb) and 978-0295747606 (hb).

"Since the start of colonial gold mining in the early 1920s, the Biangai villagers of Elauru and Winima in Papua New Guinea have moved away from planting yams and other subsistence foods to instead cultivating coffee and other cash crops and dishing for tradable flakes of gold. Decades of industrial gold mining, land development, conservation efforts, and biological research have wrought transformations in the landscape and entwined traditional Biangai gardening practices with Western capital, disrupting the relationship between place and person and the social reproduction of a community. Drawing from extensive ethnographic research, Jamon Halvaksz examines the role of place in informing indigenous relationships with conservation and development. How do Biangai make meaning with the physical world? Collapsing Western distinctions between self and an earthly other, Halvaksz shows us it is a sense of place - grounded in productive relationships between nature and culture - that connects Biangai to one another as 'placepersons' and enables them to navigate global forces amid changing local and regional economies. Centering local responses along the frontiers of resource extraction, Gardens of Gold contributes to our understanding of how neoliberal economic practices intervene in place-based economies and identities."

HICKS, DAVID. 2020. Oral Literature, Gender, and Precedence in East Timor: Metaphysics in Narrative. Copenhagen: NIAS Press. 220 pages. ISBN: 978-8776942755 (hb) and 978-8776942762 (pb).

" Decades of war, social upheaval and political change have not lessened the enduring interest of the people of East Timor (Timor-Leste) in their oral traditions, something they share with their neighbors in the eastern islands of Indonesia. Although oral literature continues to occupy a central place in Timorese cultures, new forms of expression are emerging (for instance via published fiction and in social media). Nonetheless, the corpus of Timorese oral narrative largely retains an underlying metaphysical unity. Among others, it continues to express indigenous notions about gender and precedence - two important sociocultural markers that are among the most prominent topics currently under discussion by scholars of the region today. What has yet to be done, however, is to bring Timorese oral narratives into mainstream social science scholarship by subjecting them to a rigorous scholarly analysis. That is the purpose of this masterly study by the veteran Timor scholar, David Hicks. Drawing upon more than a half century of fieldwork and publishing, he discusses the tropes found in and illuminating Timorese metaphysical thought and literature. No other work has discussed these tropes before nor indeed attempted to discern patterns of thought in Timorese narratives. Certainly, the study will be of interest to scholars of literature, social science, structural analysis, Indonesian cultures and philosophy, as well as to those interested in the country's colonial past and in efforts to conserve its natural environment. The book should also appeal to educated citizens of Timor-Leste; here is a work illuminating how future aspirations might be grounded in a common heritage."

HIRSCH, ERIC. 2021 (December 2020). Ancestral Presence: Cosmology and Historical Experience in the Papuan Highlands. Abingdon: Routledge. 256 pages. ISBN 978-0-367-35793-1 (hb) and 978-1- 003-13160-1 (eb).

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"For the Fuyuge people of the Papuan highlands, the past is not 'history' in a conventional sense. For them, the world and its history derive from a creator force called Tidibe which is central to Fuyuge cosmology: the Fuyuge are at the 'centre of the world'. But Fuyuge people are part of another history, too: they have experienced decades of mission and government influence from centres of power located elsewhere, to which their mountain home is marginal and remote. Through a detailed exploration of Fuyuge myth, changes to ritual life and cosmology, Eric Hirsch weaves an account of the relationship between these two histories. He documents the real changes wrought by colonialism, government and Christianity from the late nineteenth century to the turn of the millennium. Yet this is not a story of 'continuity and change'. Hirsch demonstrates how transformation was always central to Fuyuge life: changes brought by missionaries and government were processes they themselves initiated in the ancestral past through Tidibe, the cosmological creator force.

Contents: Prologue: A Path to Fuda; Introduction: What Causes Change? Part I. Tidibe: 1. Tidibe as Creator Force; 2. Tidibe as Myth and Mythopoeia; Part II. In the Way of Tidibe: 3. Gab Transforming; 4. Exchange; 5. One Skin; 6. Dance; Part III. Centre of the World: 7. Mission; 8. Market; 9. Law; Conclusion: History and Tidibe: A Symmetical Inversion."

KENDON, ADAM. 2020. Sign Language in Papua New Guinea: A Primary Sign Language from the Upper Lagaip Valley, Enga Province. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing. 201 pages. ISBN: 978-9027204530 (hb) and 978-9027261823 (eb). Reviews: Oceania, 90(3), 2020: 330-333 (by C.A. Padden).

"This book presents in revised form and as a single monograph three papers on a sign language from the Enga Province of Papua New Guinea. Originally published in 1980, for more than twenty years these papers remained the only report of a sign language from that part of the world. The detailed descriptive analyses that the author provided are still fresh today, and in some respects they anticipate insights into the nature of sign languages that were not further explored until much more recently. The monograph is accompanied by two essays: Sherman Wilcox comments on value and relevance of the author's work in the light of much more recent work on the linguistics of sign languages. An essay by Lauren Reed and Alan Rumsey provides an up to date survey of what is now known about sign languages in Papua New Guinea. Information about sign languages in the Solomon Island is also included.

Contents: Preface; Films used in the analysis; Conventions for signs and utterance examples: Conventions followed in referring to signs in the text and in the presentation of examples of signed utterances; Introduction; 1. General properties of signs; 2. Processes of sign formation; 3. Iconicity: How signs relate to their referents; 4. On the uses of pointing; 5. Concurrent action; 6. Aspects of discourse construction; 7. Conclusions; References; Appendix: a. Signs from the Upper Lagaip Valley (Enga) described; b. Sign Languages in Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, by Lauren W. Reed and Alan Rumsey; c. Kendon's work on a signed language from the Enga Province of Papua New Guinea: Some Implications, by Sherman Wilcox; Name Index; Topic Index."

KREUGER, BAS. 2020. Kais: A True Story of a Daring Rescue in the Swamps of New Guinea, Summer 1944. Independently published to order from Amazon. 254 pages. ISBN: 979-8628744451 (pb). Review: Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde, 176(4), 2020: 626-627 (by H.A. Poeze).

"On Thursday 27 July 1944 a B-25 bomber of the 418th Night Fighter Squadron is on a routine mission over the waters surrounding New Guinea near the Birds Head Peninsula. The crew sights a Japanese schooner and start their attack run, flying low and fast over the water. The attack succeeds but the bomber is hit and it's pilot, Ira Barnett, cannot fly it back to base. He decides on a crash landing in a remote swamp area, some 300 miles behind enemy lines. Barnett puts the plane down safely. A rescue team sets out from the island of Biak to save the crew. Flown in by Catalina flying boat, river Kais is their only way in and out of this green hell of jungle and swamp. For three weeks their small group of Allied soldiers use the Kais to find the crew in enemy territory and bring them back to safety. In 2019 the author followed in the footsteps of the rescue team, trying to find the wreck of the bomber. With a group of five he travelled up the Kais river and into the swamp. It resulted in an unexpected meeting with a local Papuan who supported of the original rescue team."

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For a summary, a map and photographs see: https://militaryhistorynow.com/2020/05/28/swamp- rescue-inside-the-daring-mission-to-extract-a-bomber-crew-shot-down-over-new-guinea-in-ww2/

KREUGER, BAS. 2020. Kais: Het waargebeurde verhaal van een gewaagde reddingsoperatie in de moerassen van Nederlands Nieuw Guinea, zomer 1944. Enschede: Boekengilde. 258 pages. ISBN: 978-9464021738 (pb).

MIMICA, JADRAN. 2020. Of Humans, Pigs, and Souls: An Essay on the Yagwoia Womba Complex. Chicago: Hau Books. 178 pages. ISBN: 978-1-912808-31-1 (pb), 978-1-912808-71-7 (eb) and 978- 1-912808-35-9 (pdf). First listed - without pdf and chapters - in Oceania Newsletter No. 96, December 2019. Retrieved 4 January 2021 from: https://haubooks.org/of-humans-pigs-and-souls-an- essay-on-the-yagwoia-womba-cannibal-complex/.

For the Yagwoia-Angan people of Papua New Guinea, womba is a malignant power with the potential to afflict any soul with cravings for pig meat and human flesh. Drawing on long-term research among the Yagwoia, and in an analysis informed by phenomenology and psychoanalysis, Jadran Mimica explores the womba complex in its local cultural-existential determinations and regional permutations. He attends to the lived experience of this complex in relation to the wider context of mortuary practices, feasting, historical cannibalism, and sorcery. His account of womba illuminates the moral meanings of Yagwoia selfhood, and associated senses of subjectivity and agency. Mimica concludes by reflecting on the recent escalation of concerns with witchcraft and sorcery in Papua New Guinea, specifically in relation to a new wave of Christian evangelism occurring in partnership with the state.

Contents: Acknowledgments; List of abbreviations; Introduction; 1. The womba condition of the soul; 2. Men and women as womba; 3. Womba self-experience; 4. The spectrum of Yagwoia cannibalism; 5. On ki'nye (sorcery) and the mother's; 6. The womba complex in regional; Concluding reflections: A new wave of Christianization; References."

PANOFF, FRANÇOISE. 2018. Maenge Gardens: A Study of Maenge Relationship to Domesticates. Editing by Françoise Barbira-Freedman. Paris: Pacific-CREDO Publocations. 222 pages. ISBN: 978- 978-2953748574 (pb). Retrieved 5 February 2021 from: https://books.openedition.org/pacific/690.

"Domesticates play a central part both in the everyday and ritual life of the Maenge people of New Britain. Maenge relationship to this category of plants is here analysed through their horticultural techniques, their systems of classification and appellation, their utilisations and finally through myths and rites. Gardening techniques as well as the systems of classification and appellation emphasise the importance of the notion of cultivar in Maenge eyes. While the taxonomy of domesticates is relatively shallow, keys are built by taking into account minute differences between cultivars, as is shown with reference to taro and cordyline. As men may receive names of taro cultivars or give their own names to cultivated trees, the boundaries between nature and culture are suppressed: domesticates appear as part of humans' culture, a point made even clearer by the attribution of a soul to cultigens since this soul endows them with powers similar to those of men: ability of feeling, agency. The distinction between hot and cold categories is fundamental for an understanding of Maenge medicine and gardening rites. The category of the rotten is also essential for a population of gardeners who fully recognise the part played by rotten matter in rebuilding the topsoil during the fallow period. Gardens, in the Maenge setting, thus appear not only as food reserves but as laboratories where experiments are ceaselessly going on as well as sanctuaries. Gardening provides not only social prestige but intellectual and aesthetic pleasures.

Contents: Acknowledgements; List of maps; List of figures; List of tables; List of photographs; Preface, by Nathalie Mitev-Grey; Foreword, by Marilyn Strathern; Introduction from the editor, by Françoise Barbira Freedman; Editor's foreword; Introduction; 1. The Maenge; 2. Maenge treatment of domesticates; 3. Maenge systems of classification and appellation of domesticates; 4. Utilisation of domesticates; 5. Gardening rites: an example from the Longueinga; Conclusion; References; Appendix I; Appendix II; Appendix III. List of plants cited in the text; Appendix IV. Matong cultivated area (January 1970)."

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PETROU, KIRSTIE. 2020. If Everyone Returned, the Island Would Sink: Urbanisation and Migration in Vanuatu. New York and Oxford: Berghahn. 214 pages. ISBN: 978-1-78920-621-0 (hb) and 978-1- 78920-622-7 (eb). Review: Island Studies Journal, 15(2), 2020: 390-391 (by L. Saddington).

"Focusing on the small island of Paama, Vanuatu, and the capital, , this book presents a rare and recent study of the ongoing significance of urbanisation and internal migration in the Global South. Based on longitudinal research undertaken in rural 'home' places, urban suburbs and informal settlements over thirty years, this book reveals the deep ambivalence of the outcome of migration, and argues that continuity in the fundamental organising principles of cultural life - in this case centred on kinship and an 'island home' - is significantly more important for urban and rural lives than the transformative impacts of migration and urbanisation.

Contents: List of Figures; Acknowledgements; Introduction; 1. Urbanisation and Migration: Rapid Change but Enduring Patterns; 2. Subsistence Realities, Material Dreams: Rural Lives and Livelihoods; 3. It's Like We Live in Town Already: Island Social Organisation; 4. The Everyday Ordinariness of Mobility: Persistent Patterns of Rural Outmigration; 5. I Just Came to Visit My Kin: The Evolution of Urban Permanence; 6. Friends, Lovers and Stranger Danger: Urban Social Worlds; 7. Living on Money: Urban Economic Life; Conclusion: Fluidity and Flexibility: A Generation of Paamese Migration and Urban Experiences; Glossary; References; Index."

SCAMBARY, JAMES. 2019. Conflict, Identity, and State Formation in East Timor 2000-2017. Leiden: Brill. 252 pages. ISBN: 978-90-04-39418-6 (hb) & 978-90-04-39679-1 (pdf). Review: Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land-, en Volkenkunde, 176(4), 2020: 610-611 (by B. Almeida); Contemporary Southeast Asia: A Journal of International and Strategic Affairs, 42(2), 2020: 305-307 (by M. Johnston)

"In Conflict, Identity, and State Formation in East Timor 2000-2017, James Scambary analyses the complex interplay between local and national level conflict and politics in the independence period. Communal conflict, often enacted by a variety of informal groups such as gangs and martial arts groups, has been a constant feature of East Timor's post-independence landscape. A focus on state building, however, in academic discourse has largely overlooked this conflict, and the informal networks that drive Timorese politics and society. Drawing on over a decade of fieldwork, Scambary documents the range of different cultural and historical dynamics and identities that drive conflict, and by which local conflicts and non-state actors became linked to national conflict, and laid the foundations of a clientelist state.

Contents: Acronyms and Foreign Terms; 1. The Enigma of the 2006 Crisis; 2. An Archaeology of Conflict; 3. The 2006 Crisis in Context; 4. Mystics, Messiahs and Machismo: Mags and Veterans' Groups; 5. Gangs or Glee Clubs? Urban Dili-Based Groups; 6. Conflict and Resilience in a Squatter Settlement; 7. Implications for Peacebuilding; 8. The Foundations of a Clientelist State; 9. Conflict and State Formation: An Integrated Understanding; References."

SPARK, CERIDWEN. 2020. The New : Gender, Space, and Belonging in Urban Papua New Guinea. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN: 978-0824881801 (hb) and 978-0824889807 (pb; April 2021).

"Drawing on postcolonial and feminist scholarship, the book adds to an emerging literature on cities in the 'Global South' as sites of oppression, but also resistance, aspiration, and activism. Taking an intersectional feminist approach, the book draws on a decade of research conducted among the educated professional women of Port Moresby, offering unique insight into class transitions and the perspectives of this small but significant cohort. The New Port Moresby expands the scope of research and writing about gendered experiences in Port Moresby, moving beyond the idea that the city is an exclusively hostile place for women. Without discounting the problems of uneven development, the author argues that the city's new places offer women a degree of freedom and autonomy in a city predominantly characterized by fear and restriction. In doing so, it offers an ethnographically rich perspective on the interaction between the 'global' and the 'local' and what this might mean for feminism and the advancement of equity in the Pacific and beyond."

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STRATHERN, MARILYN. 2020. Relations: An Anthropological Account. Durham: Duke University Press. 288 pages. 978-1-4780-0835-4 (pb), 978-1-4780-0784-5 (hb) and 978-1-4780-0934-4 (eb). Review: American Ethnologist, 47(4), 2020: 470-471 (by A. Lebner).

"The concept of relation holds a privileged place in how anthropologists think and write about the social and cultural lives they study. In Relations, eminent anthropologist Marilyn Strathern provides a critical account of this key concept and its usage and significance in the English-speaking world. Exploring relation's changing articulations and meanings over the past three centuries, Strathern shows how the historical idiosyncrasy of using an epistemological term for kinspersons ('relatives') was bound up with evolving ideas about knowledge-making and kin-making. She draws on philosophical debates about relation - such as Leibniz's reaction to Locke - and what became its definitive place in anthropological exposition, elucidating the underlying assumptions and conventions of its use. She also calls for scholars in anthropology and beyond to take up the limitations of Western relational thinking, especially against the background of present ecological crises and interest in multispecies relations. In weaving together analyses of kin-making and knowledge-making, Strathern opens up new ways of thinking about the contours of epistemic and relational possibilities while questioning the limits and potential of ethnographic methods."

"In English, analogy is a version of comparison where 'the relation instantiates similarity' (115) between perceived dissimilars. Drawing on ethnography of the Kuma of the New Guinea Highlands, Strathern instead invites us to grasp an analogical 'move to detach difference from dissimilarity' (115). This is admittedly hard for Euro-Americans to imagine, but the challenge is precisely to envisage a way of relating whose biggest worry is not dissimilarity but 'indifference … lack of differentiation' (116). This analogical mode ultimately has a built-in political lesson: when dissimilarity is not a synonym of difference, difference can simply be a life condition, even a value, not a problem to be overcome" (Asley Lebner, American Ethnologist).

"Contents: Introductions: The Compulsion of Relations; Part I: 1. Experimentations, English and Otherwise; 2. Registers of Comparison; Coda to Part I: Comparing Persons Again; Part II: 3. Expansion and Contraction; 4. The Dissimilar and the Different; Coda to Part II: Preparation; Part III: 5. Enlightenment Dramas; 6. Kinship Unbound; Coda to Part III: Visibility; Conclusions: The Reinvention of Relation at Moments of Knowledge-Making; Notes; References; Index of Names and Places; Index of Subjects."

VAN DEN BERG, RENÉ & WIEBE, BRENT. 2019. Bola Grammar Sketch. Data Papers on Papua New Guinea Languages No. 63. Ukarumpa: SIL-PNG Academic Publications. 294 pages. Review: Language and Linguistics of Melanesia, 38, 2020: 1-6 (by B. Billings). Retrieved 25/02/2021 from https://www.sil.org/system/files/reapdata/69/02/40/69024055998614577724075211921224072564/B ola_grammar_20_03_2019_final.pdf.

"Bola, also known as Bakovi, is an Austronesian language of the Willaumez linkage spoken in the Papua New Guinea province of West New Britain. With an estimated 14,000 speakers and a language area including the province's of Kimbe, Bola remains an important language of the region. Despite this, prior descriptive work regarding Bola is scarce, limited primarily to language surveys and analyses of certain aspects of the language. The Bola Grammar Sketch under review aimed to tackle this issue by providing a more thorough description than the two previous unpublished sketches by Bosco (1979) and Wiebe & Wiebe (1998). To say it has fulfilled this task would be an understatement, and the title is far too humble for its thorough, nearly 300-page text. This is not to say that the volume is wholly without its shortcomings, but the description detailed therein provides both much needed and enlightening scholarship on the Bola language" (Blaine Billings, Language and Linguistics of Melanesia)."

POLYNESIA

CROSBY, RON. 2020. The Forgotten Wars: Why The Musket Wars Matter Today. Auckland: Oratia Books. 200 pages. ISBN: 978-0947506797 (pb).

"Distinguished author and lawyer Ron Crosby rewrites is seminal The Musket Wars on a thematic basis, simplifying it to a concise work full of maps and illustrations for the general reader. Muskets, 21

potatoes and other introductions fundamentally altered the balance of power in 19th-century Aotearoa, leading to inter-iwi conflicts over almost 40 years that claimed tens of thousands of lives. This important work will further understanding of how the boom of muskets continues to echo in New Zealand today."

GALLIOT, SÉBASTIEN. 2019. Le tatouage samoan: Un rite polynésien dans l'histoire. Paris: CNRS Éditions. 447 pages. ISBN: 978-2-271-12639-9 (pb). Review: Anthropos, 115(2), 2020: 572-574 (by L. Renard).

"On ne peut remonter à une origine unique du tatouage, pratiqué dans le monde entier, mais l'origine du mot lui-même est polynésienne. En Polynésie, il est pratiqué depuis plus de 3000 ans, et revêt une dimension symbolique forte. Il y est omniprésent, sur les corps comme dans les discours. Aux îles Samoa, il consiste en un agencement iconographique prédéfini sur des parties invariables du corps, du milieu du dos aux genoux pour les hommes, sur le tour de cuisses pour les femmes. Il n'est pas un acte narcissique, un geste individuel, mais s'inscrit toujours dans un environnement social et dans un contexte ritualisé. C'est sur ce rituel d'initiation que l'auteur centre ses travaux, mettant en lumière les phénomènes de continuité, de changement, de transmission et de globalisation du métier. Alors que les motifs du tatouage polynésien ont essaimé dans le monde entier, cet ouvrage analyse les données historiques et ethnographiques dans une approche inédite.

Contents: Introduction générale; 1. Le tatouage dans la tradition orale samoane; 2. Les premiers contacts et la proto-ethnographie; 3. Le rôle des missions chrétiennes: L'instrumentalisation des rivalités politiques et l'explication de l'exception samoane; 4. La Polynésie occidentale, le rite de tatouage… et Alfred Gell; 5. L'expertise rituelle à Samoa: Le cas du tufuga ta tatau; 6. Le rituel de tatouage: Agents et cadre d'interaction; 7. Les objets du rituel: Matières et modes de fabrication; 8. Pe'a et malu: Images canoniques, éléments de la liturgie; 9. Discussion sur les savoirs rituels et leur transmission; Conclusion générale; Bibliographie; Annexes; Remerciements."

GAVET, LEON. 2021 (February). Léon Gavet: Je vous écris des Samoa: Un demi-siècle de correspondance inédite 1858 - 1909 venue de la lointaine Océanie. Letters edited by Mireille Dodart de l'Hermuzière. Preface by Serge Tcherkézoff. Le Crest: Les Editions du Volcan. 600 pages. ISBN: 979-1097339272 (pb).

"After a youth in Ardèche, brilliant secondary studies, Léon Gavet entered the minor seminary of Viviers then joined the Marist fathers. His dream came true when his bishop entrusted him with a mission in the Samoan Islands. From then on, he wrote regularly to his family, his uncles, his brothers and sisters. He recounts his 16,500 km journey in more than precarious conditions, then, in addition to his apostolic work with the indigenous populations, the small facts of his daily life, the major events in France and in the world, the struggles for the power of the great powers: United States, England, Germany, civil wars of local chiefdoms. He makes us discover the customs of the islands of the South Seas, his involvement in the work for the construction of churches, roads, his agricultural trials, his links with his colleagues and his disciples. The two hundred personal letters published here are unpublished; all were transcribed by his uncle and then by his cousin, making a thousand pages of an extraordinary itinerary. They cover a period of fifty-one years spent in the islands because Léon Gavet never returned to France. They retrace the itinerary of a man of faith, humanist, entrepreneur, amateur photographer artist, adventurer. They show us his daily life imbued with intimate and often humorous anecdotes, but also his interest in the religious and geopolitical news of this region in the second half of the 19th century."

KARENA-HOLMES, DAVID. 2020. Te Reo Maori: The Basics Explained. Auckland: Oratia Books. 168 pages. ISBN: 978-0947506698 (hb).

"The use of te reo Maori in daily New Zealand life is snowballing, as is demand for resources to make learning the language efficient and enjoyable. This book helps answer that demand. Here in simple terms is a thorough guide to the building blocks of grammar in te reo, showing how to create phrases, sentences and paragraphs. After an introductory chapter on pronunciation and written forms of the language, 17 chapters introduce the main base words, particles and determiners that guide their use. The book employs real-life examples to illustrate how Maori grammar works day to day. Te Reo Maori: The Basics Explained draws on David Karena-Holmes' decades of experience 22

teaching and writing about Maori language. Building on his previous works, this updated and expanded approach will be an essential companion for speakers at any level.

KAWHARU, METATA & TAPSELL, PAUL. 2020. Whariki: The Growth of Maori Community Entrepreneurship. Auckland: Oratia Books. 200 pages. ISBN: 978-0947506636 (pb).

"Understanding what drives enterprise within an indigenous cultural space is not widely understood in New Zealand. Whariki reveals how kin-based business ventures created by Maori have promoted social, economic and environmental wellbeing from the whenua (land) up. Its core is eight case studies - some arising from iwi-driven ideas, some ideas from marae-based whanau. These range from a bee school in Northland, ginseng growing in the King Country, to the rehabilitation of Maori prisoners in Dunedin and a web-engaged response to accessing tribal marae. Always reaching into ancestral ties and lessons to provide guidance and foundation for their ideas, these businesses are wrapped in cultural approaches that engage kin communities in improving the wellbeing of their iwi, hapu and whanau. This book explores the successes, the failures, the learnings and the futures of these opportunities for Maori."

MEAD, HIRINI MOKO. 2020. Te Toi Whakairo: The Art of Maori Carving. Auckland: Oratia Books. 276 pages.ISBN: 978-0947506377 (pb).

"Te Toi Whakairo is the definitive introduction to Maori woodcarving. It explores the evolution of styles and techniques, and provides detailed explanations of styles in different parts of Aotearoa New Zealand. Later chapters delve into the main structures, forms and motifs, the role of the woodcarver, modern art forms, and practical guidance for use of materials, tools, techniques, surface and background decoration."

PENNY, H. GLENN 2019. Im Schatten Humboldts: Eine tragische Geschichte der deutschen Ethnologie. Translated by Martin Richter. München: Verlag C.H. Beck. 287 pages. ISBN: 978-3-406-74128-9 (pb). Review: Anthropos, 115(2), 2020: 616-621 (by M. Schindlbeck).

Contents: Einleitung Kihawahine: Die Zukunft in der Vergangenheit; 1. Hawaiianische Federumhänge und Maya-Skulpturen: Das Sammeln von Ursprüngen; 2. Der Haida-Totempfahl und die Nootka-Adlermaske: Hypersammeln; 3. Bronzen aus Benin: Die Kolonialismusfragen; 4. Guatemaltekische Textilien: Dauerhafte Sammelnetzwerke; 5. Die Maske des fliegenden Schwans: Die Vergangenheit in der Zukunft; Epilog: Humboldt als Zugpferd; Danksagung; Anhang; Anmerkungen; Bild- und Kartennachweis; Personenregister."

PENNY, H. GLENN. 2021 (June). In Humboldt's Shadow: A Tragic History of German Ethnology. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 248 pages. ISBN: 978-0691211145 (hc) and 978-0691216454 (eb).

"The Berlin Ethnological Museum is one of the world's largest and most important anthropological museums, housing more than a half million objects collected from around the globe. In Humboldt's Shadow tells the story of the German scientists and adventurers who, inspired by Alexander von Humboldt's inclusive vision of the world, traveled the earth in pursuit of a total history of humanity. It also details the fate of their museum, which they hoped would be a scientists' workshop, a place where a unitary history of humanity might emerge. H. Glenn Penny shows how these early German ethnologists assembled vast ethnographic collections to facilitate their study of the multiplicity of humanity, not to confirm emerging racist theories of human difference. He traces how Adolf Bastian filled the Berlin museum in an effort to preserve the records of human diversity, yet how he and his supporters were swept up by the imperialist currents of the day and struck a series of Faustian bargains to ensure the growth of their collections. Penny describes how influential administrators such as Wilhelm von Bode demanded that the museum be transformed into a hall for public displays, and how Humboldt's inspiring ideals were ultimately betrayed by politics and personal ambition. In Humboldt's Shadow calls on museums to embrace anew Bastian's vision while deepening their engagement with indigenous peoples concerning the provenance and stewardship of these collections."

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ZIMMERMANN, HEINRICH. 2019. Le Dernier Voyage du capitaine Cook. Translated by Chrtistophe Lucchese. With an introduction, notes and the explanatory discourse 'Interpréter la mort de Cook: Les enquêtes de Marshall Sahlins' by Isabelle Merle. Toulouse: Anacharsis Editions. 160 pages. ISBN: 979-1092011814 (pb). Review: The Journal of Pacific History, 55(4), 2020: 554-556 (by E. Dotte-Sarout).

"In 1776, Heinrich Zimmermann embarked on the third voyage of exploration in the Pacific led by the legendary Captain James Cook. The German sailor brought back the fascinated account of his discovery, over four years, of the peoples of the great ocean. In it, he recounts his journeys, from New Zealand to the shores of Alaska, passing through Tonga, Tahiti and especially Hawaii, where, following an enigmatic ceremony, Cook was put to death before his eyes by the islanders. For more than two centuries, the reasons for this murder and its interpretation have given rise to a number of hypotheses. In her concluding essay, historian Isabelle Merle attempts to adjust the focus around the event, in order to penetrate the texture of these famous 'first contacts' that mark the complex history of Oceania."

4. RECENT PUBLICATIONS

[Mistakes occasionally occur in this section. We are happy to receive corrections that will be noted in our online database.]

GENERAL / ARTICLES

AHLUWALIA, P., & MILLER, T. (2021). Aid, Dependence, Climate - A Pacific Dilemma. Social Identities, 27(1), 1-2.

ALI, S., WILLIAMS, O., CHANG, O., SHIDHAYE, R., HUNTER, E., & CHARLTON, F. (2020). Mental Health in the Pacific: Urgency and Opportunity. Asia Pacific Viewpoint, 61(3), 537-550.

ASH, J. E. (2020). A Typology of Erasure: The Involvement of Evangelical Missionaries in the Generative Spiritscapes of Torres Strait and Southern Central New Guinea. Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2), 90-100. Special issue dedicated to Angela Middleton: The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in and the Pacific.

BAILEY, R.-L. (2020). Border Closures: Experiences of ni‐Vanuatu Recognized Seasonal Employer Scheme Workers. Oceania, 90(S1), 68-74. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

BEDFORD, S., FLEXNER, J. L., & JONES, M. (2020). The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in Australasia and the Pacific. Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2), 7-10. Special issue dedicated to Angela Middleton: The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in Australasia and the Pacific.

BERTA, O. G. (2021). From Arrival Stories to Origin Mythmaking: Missionaries in the . Ethnohistory, 68(1), 53-75.

COIFFIER, C. (2020). In memoriam Aloï Pilioko (1935-2020). Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes(2/151), 321-326.

DAVIS, S., MUNGER, L. A., & LEGACY, H. J. (2020). Someone Else's Chain, Someone Else's Road: U.S. Military Strategy, China's Belt and Road Initiative, and Island Agency in the Pacific Island Studies Journal, 15(2), 13-36. Thematic section: Silk Road archipelagos: Islands in the Belt and Road Initiative, edited by Adam Grydehøj, Sasha Davis, & Huan Zhang. Retrieved 27 November 2020 from: https://www.islandstudies.ca/node/538.

DREHER, T. (2020). Racism and Media: A Response from Australia during the Global Pandemic. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 43(13), 2363-2371. Symposium section: Gavan Titley's Racism and Media.

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EICKELKAMP, U., & CHAO, S. (2020). Introducing Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19. Oceania, 90(S1), 3- 5. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

FAIR, H. (2020). Their Sea of Islands? Pacific Climate Warriors, Oceanic Identities, and World Enlargement. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 341-369.

FONTEIN, J. (2021). From "Other Worlds" and "Multiple Ontologies" to "a Methodological Project That Poses Ontological Questions to Solve Epistemological Problems": What Happened to Thinking through Things? Ethnos, 86(1), 173-188. Review article of: 1. A. Holbraad, M. and M. Pedersen (eds), The Ontological Turn: An Anthropological Exposition (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017) and 2. A. Henare, M. Holbraad and S. Wastell, Thinking through Things: Theorising Artefacts Ethnographically (London: Routledge, 2007).

HALTER, N. (2020). Teaching and Technology at the University of the South Pacific. The Journal of Pacific History, 55(4), 537-547.

HERMANN, A., & WALWORTH, M. (2020). Approche interdisciplinaire des échanges interculturels et de l'intégration des communautés polynésiennes dans le centre du Vanuatu. Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes(2/151), 239-262. Dossier: Hommage à Françoise Ozanne-Rivierre et à Jean-Claude Rivierre: Linguistique et anthropologie linguistique océanienne.

HOLDEN, P., & PEKMERZOVIC, A. (2020). How Accurate Are the Doing Business Indicators? A Pacific Island Case Study Asia and the Pacific Policy Studies, 7(3), 247-261.

JONES, R. T., & DE JONG, M. (2020). Bill Dawbin, Tasman Diplomacy, and the Great South Pacific Humpback Collapse of 1959-62. The Journal of Pacific History, 55(4), 492-519.

JORGENSEN, D. (2020). Kenelm O. L. Burridge (1922-2019). American Anthropologist, 122(4), 984-987.

KABUTAUKA, T. (2020). COVID‐19 and Re‐storying Economic Development in Oceania. Oceania, 90(S1), 47-52. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

KAIKU, P. (2020). No Friend but the Mountains: A Reflection. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 461-467. Review of Behrouz Boochani, No Friend but the Mountains, translated by Omid Tofighian (Sydney: Picador, 2018).

KEENAN, S. (2020). Expanding Terra Nullius. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 449-460.

KIDDLE, G. L. (2020). Achieving the Desired State of Conservation for East Rennell, Solomon Islands: Progress, Opportunities and Challenges. Asia and the Pacific Policy Studies, 7(3), 262-277.

KIRSCH, S. (2020). Why Pacific Islanders Stopped Worrying about the Apocalypse and Started Fighting Climate Change. American Anthropologist, 122(4), 827-839.

LI, C., CHEN, J., & GRYDEHØJ, A. (2020). Island Climate Change Adaptation and Global Public Goods within the Belt and Road Initiative. Island Studies Journal, 15(2), 173-192. Thematic section: Silk Road archipelagos: Islands in the Belt and Road Initiative, edited by Adam Grydehøj, Sasha Davis, & Huan Zhang. Retrieved 27 November 2020 from: https://www.islandstudies.ca/node/538.

LOWE, E. D. (2020). A Comparative Ethnographic Study of Suicide Epidemics. In M. Schnegg & E. D. Lowe (Eds.), Comparing Cultures: Innovations in Comparative Ethnography (pp. 69-90). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

MACLELLAN, N. (2020). The Region in Review: International Issues and Events, 2019. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 523-544.

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MOYLE, R. (2020). We the Voyagers, Part 1. Our Vaka (Lata's Children) and Part 2. Our Moana, directed by M. George and H.M. Wyeth (Vaka Taumako Projec, 2020). The Journal of Pacific History, 55(4), 548-549. Review.

O'REILLY, J., ISENHOUR, C., MCELWEE, P., & ORLOVE, B. (2020). Climate Change: Expanding Anthropological Possibilities. Annual Review of Anthropology, 49, 13-29.

PAWLEY, A. (2020). On Rank and Leadership in Proto Oceanic Society. Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes(2/151), 223-238. Dossier: Hommage à Françoise Ozanne-Rivierre et à Jean-Claude Rivierre: Linguistique et anthropologie linguistique océanienne.

RODD, A. (2020). A Road to Island Sovereignty and Empowerment? Fiji's Aims within the Belt and Road Initiative. Island Studies Journal, 15(2), 93-118. Thematic section: Silk Road archipelagos: Islands in the Belt and Road Initiative, edited by Adam Grydehøj, Sasha Davis, & Huan Zhang. Retrieved 27 November 2020 from: https://www.islandstudies.ca/node/538.

SAYER, J. C., DALSGAARD, S., & WEST, P. (2020). "It Is Not Because They Are Bad People": Australia's Refugee Resettlement in Papua New Guinea and . The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 435-448.

SEN, S., AGUILAR, J. P., & PETTY, M. (2020). An Ecological Framework for Understanding HIV- and AIDS-related Stigma among Asian American and Pacific Islander Men Who Have Sex with Men living in the USA. Culture, Health and Sexuality, 23(1), 85-97.

TEAIWA, K. (2020). About the Artist: Lisa Hilli. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), vii.

TIATIA-SEATH, J., TUPOU, T., & FOOKES, I. (2020). Climate Change, Mental Health, and Well-being for Pacific Peoples: A Literature Review. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 399-430.

VAUGHN, K., FITISEMSNU JR, J., HAFOKA, I., & FOLAU, K. (2020). Unmasking the Essential Realities of COVID‐19: The Pasifika Community in the Salt Lake Valley. Oceania, 90(S1), 60-67. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

WALTON, G. W., & DINNEN, S. (2020). Lost in Space? The Spatial and Scalar Dimensions of Organised Crime in the Pacific. Asia Pacific Viewpoint, 61(3), 521-536.

WATSON, R., & NEL, E. (2020). Applying Development Models to Small Island States: Is a TOURAB Country? Asia Pacific Viewpoint, 61(3), 551-565.

GENERAL / BOOKS

FISHER, W., & FIRTH, S. (2020). Decolonising American Micronesia. Canberra: Department of Pacific Affairs, ANU. Working Paper No. 2020/4. Retrieved 8 February 2021 from: http://dpa.bellschool.anu.edu.au/ssgm-research-communication/working-paper-series.

AUSTRALIA / ARTICLES

ATTWOOD, B. (2020). Rights, Duties and Aboriginal People. Australian Journal of Politics and History, 66(2), 543-559.

BULLOCH, H., & FOGARTY, W. (2020). Alterity and the Asymmetric Gaze: Aboriginal Constructions of Self and Other in Northwest Arnhem Land. Anthropological Forum, 30(4), 398-418. Special issue: Stranger Races: Reflections on Alterity in Constructions of the Self.

CASO, F. (2020). Representing Indigenous Soldiers at the Australian War Memorial: A Political Analysis of the Art Exhibition For Country, For Nation. Australian Journal of Political Science, 55(4), 345-361.

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CORPORAL, S. D., SUNDERLAND, N., O'LEARY, P., & RILEY, T. (2020). Indigenous Health Workforce: Exploring How Roles Impact Experiences in Higher Education. International Journal of Critical Indigenous Studies, 13(2), 101-122.

DEW, A., BARTON, R., GILROY, J., RYALL, L., LINCOLN, M., JENSEN, H., et al. (2020). Importance of Land, Family and Culture for a Good Life: Remote Aboriginal People with Disability and Carers. Australian Journal of Social Issues, 55(4), 418-438.

FIJN, N. (2021). Donald Thomson: Observations of Animal Connections in Visual Ethnography in Northern Australia. Ethnos, 86(1), 44-68. Special issue: Revisiting the More-than-human.

GARA, T. (2019). The 1918-19 Influenza Pandemic and Its Impact on Aboriginal People in South Australia. Aboriginal History, 43. Retrieved 12 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/AH.43.2019.

GIBSON, J., & MULLET, R. (2020). The Last Jeraeil of Gippsland: Rediscovering an Aboriginal Ceremonial Site. Ethnohistory, 67(4), 551-577.

GRAINGER, D., WATKIN-LUI, F., & CHEER, K. (2021). The Value of Informed Agency for Torres Strait Climate Change. Ecological Economics((180)), 1-11. Ejournal: Article 106880.

HOBBS, H. (2020). The Road to Uluru: Constitutional Recognition and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Australian Journal of Politics and History, 66(4), 613-632.

JARVIS, D., STOECKL, N., LARSON, S., GRAINGER, D., ADDISON, J., & LARSON, A. (2021). The Learning Generated through Indigenous Natural Resources Management Programs Increases Quality of Life for Indigenous People - Improving Numerous Contributors to Wellbeing. Ecological Economics((180)), 1-9. Ejournal: Article 106899.

JORGENSEN, D. (2019). Big John Dodo and Karajarri Histories. Aboriginal History, 43, 77-92. Retrieved 12 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/AH.43.2019.

KARSKENS, G., & MCKENNA, M. (2019). Nah Doongh's Song: Grace Karskens and Mark McKenna in Conversation. Aboriginal History, 43, 57-76. Retrieved 12 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/AH.43.2019.

LECKNING, B., HIRVONEN, T., ARMSTRONG, G., CAREY, T. A., WESTBY, M., RINGBAUER, A., et al. (2020). Developing Best Practice Guidelines for the Psychosocial Assessment of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People Presenting to Hospital with Self-harm and Suicidal Thoughts. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 54(9), 874-882.

MARIE, L. (2020). Negotiating Hip Hop Persons: Authenticity, Participation and Breaking in Perth, Western Australia. The Australian Journal of Anthropology, 31(3), 347-362.

MARSDEN, B. (2019). "What's This about a New Mission?" Assimilation, Resistance and the Morwell Transit Village. Aboriginal History, 43, 93-115. Retrieved 12 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/AH.43.2019.

MCGREGOR, R. (2020). Disputing the Territory: The Payne-Fletcher Report of 1937. Australian Historical Studies, 51(4), 383-400.

MCLAREN, A. (2019). No Fish, No House, No Melons: The Earliest Aboriginal Guides in Colonial New South Wales. Aboriginal History, 43, 33-55. Retrieved 12 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/AH.43.2019.

MEAKINS, F., PENSALFINI, R., ZIPF, C., & HAMILTON-HOLLOWAY, A. (2020). Lend Me Your Verbs: Verb borrowing between Jingulu and Mudburra. Australian Journal of Linguistics, 40(3), 296-318.

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NORMAN, D., MILLER, J., TIMOTHY, M., FRIDAY, G., NORMAN, L., FRIDAY, A., et al. (2020). This is Our Story: Yanyuwa Experiences of a Pandemic. Oceania, 90(S1), 34-40. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

OSBORNE, J. (2020). Erased Places? Revealing the Mission Network of the Swan River Colony, 1829- 1879. Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2), 101-114. Special issue dedicated to Angela Middleton: The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in Australasia and the Pacific.

PALME, S. (2019). "Songlines: Tracking the Seven Sisters" Exhibition National Museum of Australia, Canberra 5 September 2017 to 28 February 2018. Aboriginal History, 43, 147-157. Retrieved 12 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/AH.43.2019.

RICHARDSON, J. (2019). The Pilbara Aboriginal Strike. Aboriginal History, 43, 173-175. Review of the exhibition The Pilbara Aboriginal Strike, by Bain Attwood and Anne Scrimgeour at: https://www.pilbarastrike.org/. See also Y. Perkins, The Pilbara Aboriginal Strike: A Significant New Digital Exhibition, Australian Historical Studies, 51(3), 2020: 341-343.

ROBERTSON, F., & BARROW, J. (2020). A Review of Nyoongar Responses to Severe Climate Change and the Threat of Epidemic Disease - Lessons from Their Past. International Journal of Critical Indigenous Studies, 13(2), 123-138.

ROWSE, T., & LEITHHEAD, B. (2019). "The Ordered Behaviour of the Individual Himself": Cecil Cook's Biological Politics. Aboriginal History, 43, 117-144. Retrieved 12 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/AH.43.2019.

SELVANATHAN, E. A., SELVANATHAN, S., & JAYASINGHE, M. (2020). Nexus between Drinking Patterns, Gender and Life Satisfaction: Some Evidence from Indigenous Australians. Australian Journal of Social Issues, 55(4), 396-417.

SMITH, N. (2020). "Carried Off in Their Hundreds": Epidemic Diseases as Structural Violence among Indigenous Peoples in Northwestern Australia. History and Anthropology, 31(4), 526-543.

TEMPLE, J. B., WONG, H., FERDINAND, A., AVERY, S., PARADIES, Y., & KELAHER, M. (2020). Exposure to Interpersonal Racism and Avoidance Behaviours Reported by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander People with a Disability. Australian Journal of Social Issues, 55(4), 376-395.

VAN RIJSWIJK, H. (2020). Re-defining Gendered Harm and Institutions under Colonialism: #MeToo in Australia. Australian Feminist Studies, 35(195), 244-260.

MELANESIA /ARTICLES

AVRAM, A. A. (2020). Some Notes on Papuan Pidgin English. Language and Linguistics in Melanesia, 38, 124-147. Retrieved 25 February 2021 from: https://www.langlxmelanesia.com/llm-vol-38-2020.

BABLIS, G. W. (2020). The Great Mask Debate - To Wear or Not to Wear? Oceania, 90(S1), 25-29. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

BAINTON, N. (2021). Menacing the Mine: Double Asymmetry and Mutual Incomprehension in Lihir. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 401-438). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

BAINTON, N., & MCDOUGALL, D. (2021). Unequal Lives in the Western Pacific. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 1-46). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

BAINTON, N. A., MCDOUGALL, D., ALEXEYEFF, K., & COX, J. (2021). Preface: Scholar, Teacher, Mentor, Friend: Essays in Honour of Martha Macintyre. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. 28

Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. vii- ix). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

BANASI, R., & WOLFERS, E. P. (2020). Madang Art Maniacs. Oceania, 90(S1), 21-24. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

BARKER, J. (2021). The Missionary's Dilemma: A Short History of Christian Marriage and its Impact upon Gender Equality in Maisin Society. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 157-181). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

BARNARD, T., & SHERMAN, M. (2019). More String Figures from Vanuatu. Bulletin of the International String Figure Association, 26, 115-181.

BARTOLE, T. (2020). The Ontological Antinomy: Food, Surfaces, and Transcendence in the Village of Awim, Papua New Guinea. Hau: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, 10(3), 874-889. Retrieved 21 December 2020 from: https://www.haujournal.org/index.php/hau/issue/view/hau10.3.

BATTAGLIA, D. (2017). Aeroponic Gardens and Their Magic: Plants/Persons/Ethics in Suspension. History and Anthropology, 28(3), 263-292.

BEDFORD, S., HASKELL-CROOK, D., SPRIGGS, M., & SHING, R. (2020). Encounters with Stone: Missionary Battles with Idols in the Southern New Hebrides. Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2), 21-33. Special issue dedicated to Angela Middleton: The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in Australasia and the Pacific.

BINO, R. (2020). A Brief on the Intersection between Climate Change Impacts and Asylum and Refugee Seekers' Incarceration on Manus Island, Papua New Guinea. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 484- 491.

BIRCHFIELD, A., & PEARCE, E. (2021). Syllable Prominence in Unua. Language and Linguistics in Melanesia, 39, 1-17. Retrieved 25 February 2021 from: https://www.langlxmelanesia.com/llm-vol- 39-2021.

BOEGE, V. (2020). Bougainville. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 545-554. Section: Melanesia in Review: Issues and Events, 2019.

BOGIRI, R. (2020). Vanuatu. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 611-619. Section: Melanesia in Review: Issues and Events, 2019.

BOVENSIEPEN, J. (2020). On the Banality of Wilful Blindness: Ignorance and Affect in Extractive Encounters. Critique of Anthropology, 40(4), 490–507. Special Issue: Wilful Blindness, edited by Judith Bovensiepen and Mathijs Pelkmans.

BRIL, I. (2020). Processus évolutifs de langues de l'extrême nord de la Nouvelle-Calédonie: Le cas du nêlêmwa-nixumwak et du zuanga-yuanga. Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes(2/151), 197-216. Dossier: Hommage à Françoise Ozanne-Rivierre et à Jean-Claude Rivierre: Linguistique et anthropologie linguistique océanienne.

CHAUCHAT, M. (2020). New Caledonia. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 570-578. Section: Melanesia in Review: Issues and Events, 2019.

COX, J. (2021). Inequalities of Aspiration: Class, Cargo and the Moral Economy of Development in Papua New Guinea. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 237-266). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

DALSGAARD, S., & OTTO, T. (2020). From Drifters to Asylum Seekers. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 503-508. 29

DEAN, M. R. U. (2020). COVID‐19 and Fiji: A Case Study. Oceania, 90(S1), 96-106. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

DEMIAN, M. (2021). The Problem of the Semi‑alienable Anthropologist. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 109- 129). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

DWYER, P. D., & MINNEGAL, M. (2020). COVID‐19 and Facebook in Papua New Guinea: Fly River Forum. Asia and the Pacific Policy Studies, 7(3), 233-246.

DWYER, P. D., & MINNEGAL, M. (2020). On Reading Patrol Reports - 3: Burnett River People. The Journal of Pacific History, 55(4), 520-533.

EDITORS. (2020). Article about Beauty and Belonging in Papua, Indonesia Wins Wang Gungwu Prize for 2019. Asian Studies Review, 44(2), 163. About Terje Toomistu, Embodied Notions of Belonging: Practices of Beauty among Waria in West Papua, Indonesia, Asian Studies Review, 43(4), 2019: 581-599.

ERIKSSON, H., SULU, R., BLYTHE, J. L., VAN DER PLOEG, J., & ANDREW, N. (2020). Intangible Links between Household Livelihoods and Food Security in Solomon Islands: Implications for Rural Development. Ecology and Society, 25(4), 1-12. Ejournal: Article 18. Retrieved 2 February 2021 from: https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol25/iss4/.

EVES, R. (2020). Engendering Sexual Desire: Love Magic, Sexuality and Agency in Papua New Guinea. Anthropological Forum, 30(4), 426-442.

FERNS, N. (2020). Colonialism as Foreign Aid: Australian Developmental Policy in Papua New Guinea, 1945-75. Australian Historical Studies, 51(4), 459-476.

FILER, C. (2021). Measuring Mobilities and Inequalities in Papua New Guinea's Mining Workforce. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 359-399). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

FLEXNER. (2020). Gendering the Archaeology of the Mission Frontier in the New Hebrides. Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2), 11-20. Special issue dedicated to Angela Middleton: The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in Australasia and the Pacific.

FOALE, S. (2021). The Unequal Place of Anthropology in Cross‑disciplinary Research on Environmental Management in the Pacific and What to Do about It. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 77-107). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

FOUKONA, J. (2020). Solomon Islands. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 595-605. Section: Melanesia in Review: Issues and Events, 2019.

GEWERTZ, D., & ERRINGTON, F. (2021). Stingy Egalitarianism: Precarity and Jealousy at the Sisiak Settlement, Madang, Papua New Guinea. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 213-235). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

GROUNDER, R. (2020). Economic Vulnerabilities and Livelihoods: Impact of COVID‐19 in Fiji and Vanuatu. Oceania, 90(S1), 107-113. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

GUO, P.-Y. (2020). Marriage‐related Exchanges and the Agency of Women among the Langalanga, Solomon Islands. Oceania, 90(3), 273-291. Special issue: Bridewealth and the Autonomy of Women, edited by: Christine Jourdan and Karen Sykes. 30

HEMER, S. R. (2021). Global Health, Tuberculosis and Local Health Campaigns: Reinforcing and Reshaping Health and Gender Inequalities in Lihir, Papua New Guinea. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 131-156). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

HENRY, A., VANDENDRIESSCHE, É., & OZANNE-RIVIERRE, F. (2020). Les jeux de ficelle en Nouvelle-Calédonie: Une recherche de terrain inédite de Françoise Ozanne-Rivierre (1941-2007). Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes(2/151), 177-196. Dossier: Hommage à Françoise Ozanne- Rivierre et à Jean-Claude Rivierre: Linguistique et anthropologie linguistique océanienne.

HENRY, R., & VÁVROVÁ, D. (2020). Brideprice and Prejudice: An Audio‐visual Ethnography on Marriage and Modernity in Mt Hagen, Papua New Guinea. Oceania, 90(3), 214-233. Special issue: Bridewealth and the Autonomy of Women, edited by: Christine Jourdan and Karen Sykes.

HERNAWAN, B. (2020). Confronting Politics of Death in Papua. In K. Henne & R. Shah (Eds.), Routledge Handbook of Public Criminologies (pp. 213-227). New York: Routledge.

HERNAWAN, B. (2020). Papua. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 578-587. Section: Melanesia in Review: Issues and Events, 2019.

HOUGHTON, E. (2019). Ever in the Making: Actors and Injustice in a Papua New Guinea Village Court. In S. Brunnegger (Ed.), Everyday Justice: Law, Ethnography, Injustice (pp. 182-205). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

JOLLY, M. (2021). Intersecting Inequalities, Moving Positionalities: An Interlude Margaret Jolly. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 439-467). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

JONES, M., ZUBRYCKA, A., BEDFORD, S., SPRIGGS, M., & SHING, R. (2020). "Death and His Body- servant": Health, Architecture and Missionary Endeavour at the Anelcauhat Mission House, Vanuatu. Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2), 34-46. Special issue dedicated to Angela Middleton: The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in Australasia and the Pacific.

JORGENSEN, D. (2021). Exiles and Empty Houses: Contingent Events and Their Aftermath in the Ok Tedi Hinterland. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 267-304). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

JOURDAN, C. (2020). Restituting Language: Ethics, Ideology and the Making of a Dictionary. Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes(2/151), 285-296. Dossier: Hommage à Françoise Ozanne-Rivierre et à Jean-Claude Rivierre: Linguistique et anthropologie linguistique océanienne.

JOURDAN, C., & LABBÉ, F. (2020). Urban Women and the Transformations of Braedpraes in . Oceania, 90(3), 253-272. Special issue: Bridewealth and the Autonomy of Women, edited by: Christine Jourdan and Karen Sykes.

KADIR, H. A. (2020). Competitive Hospitality: Ritual Exchanges in the Periphery of West Papua Province, Indonesia. Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes(2/151), 297-306.

LEACH, M. (2020). Timor-Leste. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 606-611. Section: Melanesia in Review: Issues and Events, 2019.

LEBLIC, I. (2020). Françoise Ozanne-Rivierre et Jean-Claude Rivierre, deux linguistes engagés auprès des Kanak et de leurs langues. Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes(2/151), 125-158. Dossier: Hommage à Françoise Ozanne-Rivierre et à Jean-Claude Rivierre: Linguistique et anthropologie linguistique océanienne. 31

LEWENIQILA, I., & VUNIBOLA, S. (2020). Food Security in COVID‐19: Insights from Indigenous Fijian Communities. Oceania, 90(S1), 81-88. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

LYNCH, J. (2020). Bislama Stress: A Small Conundrum. Language and Linguistics in Melanesia, 38, 176- 181. Retrieved 25 February 2021 from: https://www.langlxmelanesia.com/llm-vol-38-2020.

LYNCH, J. (2020). Pre-Root Accretions in Anejom̃ . Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes(2/151), 217- 222. Dossier: Hommage à Françoise Ozanne-Rivierre et à Jean-Claude Rivierre: Linguistique et anthropologie linguistique océanienne.

MACLEAN, N. (2021). Prologue: Pragmatism, Prescience and Principle. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. xi- xix). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

MAIN, M. (2021). From Donation to Handout: Resource Wealth and Transformations of Leadership in Huli Politics. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 335-358). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

MCDOUGALL, D. (2021). Gendered Ambition and Disappointment: Women and Men in a Vernacular Language Education Movement in Melanesia. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 183-211). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

MCNAMARA, K. E., CLISSOLD, R., & WESTOBY, R. (2020). Marketplaces as Sites for the Development‐adaptation‐disaster Trifecta: Insights from Vanuatu. Asia Pacific Viewpoint, 61(3), 566-576.

MISHRA, M. (2020). The Curious Case of Montowinie (Emigration Pass 887½). The Journal of Pacific History, 55(4), 475-491.

MULHOLLAND, P., & SALAZAR, C. (2020). The Origins of Divergent and Oscillating Modes of Religiosity. Ethos, 48(2), 250-267.

NEUENDORF, N. (2020). Bridewealth a Pardon: New Relationships and Restoration of Good Daughters. Oceania, 90(3), 194-213. Special issue: Bridewealth and the Autonomy of Women, edited by: Christine Jourdan and Karen Sykes.

NOBLE, P. D. (2019). Memories of Collecting New Guinea String Figures in 1914: Excerpts from Kathleen Haddon's Unpublished Diary. Bulletin of the International String Figure Association, 26, 7-20.

NOLAN, C., & RITCHIE, J. (2020). A New Collection and Home for Oral History at the National Museum and Art Gallery of Papua New Guinea. The Journal of Pacific History, 55(4), 534-536.

OZANNE-RIVIERRE, F., & LEBLIC, I. (2020). Les jeux de ficelle en Nouvelle-Calédonie. Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes(2/151), 159-176. Dossier: Hommage à Françoise Ozanne-Rivierre et à Jean-Claude Rivierre: Linguistique et anthropologie linguistique océanienne.

PAINI, A. (2020). "On a nos mots à dire": Kanak Women's Experience of Bridewealth in Lifou. Oceania, 90(3), 309-329. Special issue: Bridewealth and the Autonomy of Women, edited by: Christine Jourdan and Karen Sykes.

POWELL DAVIES, T. (2020). From the Bubble to the Hearth: Social Co‐presence in the Era of COVID‐19 in Asmat, Indonesian Papua. Oceania, 90(S1), 14-20. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

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RANDIN, G. (2020). COVID‐19 and Food Security in Fiji: The Reinforcement of Subsistence Farming Practices in Rural and Urban Areas. Oceania, 90(S1), 89-95. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

ROBINSON, D., RAVEN, M., MAKIN, E., KALFATAK, D., & HICKEY, F. (2021). Legal Geographies of Kava, Kastom and Indigenous Knowledge: Next Steps under the Nagoya Protocol. Geoforum(118), 169-179.

SALYER, J. C. (2020). The Denial of Human Dignity in the Age of Human Rights under Australia's Operation Sovereign Borders. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 512-521.

SERVY, A. (2020). "We've Paid your Vagina to Make Children!": Bridewealth and Women's Marital and Reproductive Autonomy in Port‐Vila, Vanuatu. Oceania, 90(3), 292-308. Special issue: Bridewealth and the Autonomy of Women, edited by: Christine Jourdan and Karen Sykes.

SIMIÃO, D. S., & SILVA, K. (2020). Playing with Ambiguity: The Making and Unmaking of Local Power in Postcolonial Timor‐Leste. The Australian Journal of Anthropology, 31(3), 333-346.

SINGH, S., BHAT, J. A., SHAH, S., & PALA, N. A. (2021). Coastal Resource Management and Tourism Development in Fiji Islands: A Conservation Challenge. Environment, Development and Sustainability, 23(3), 3009-3027.

SOUSA, L. (2019). State Appropriation of Traditional Actors and Oral Narratives in Timor-Leste. Journal of South-East Asian Studie, 12(2), 209-223.

SPARKS-NGENGE, K. (2020). The Story of Holim Pas Tok Ples [Holding on to Our Indigenous Languages], a Short Film about Indigenous Language on Lou Island, Manus Province, Papua New Guinea. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 478-483.

STIEFVATER, J. (2020). Papua New Guinea. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 587-595. Section: Melanesia in Review: Issues and Events, 2019

SYKES, K. M. (2020). A Father's Perspective on Bridewealth in the Making of the Transnational Papua New Guinean Household. Oceania, 90(3), 234-252. Special issue: Bridewealth and the Autonomy of Women, edited by: Christine Jourdan and Karen Sykes.

SYKES, K. M., & JOURDAN, C. (2020). Bridewealth and the Autonomy of Women in Melanesia. Oceania, 90(3), 178-193. Special issue: Bridewealth and the Autonomy of Women, edited by: Christine Jourdan and Karen Sykes.

TARAI, J. (2020). Fiji. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 554-570. Section: Melanesia in Review: Issues and Events, 2019.

TATEO, G. (2020). Viktor Shklovsky, Bronislaw Malinowski, and the Invention of a Narrative Device: Implications for a History of Ethnographic Theory. Hau: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, 10(3), 813-827. Retrieved 21 December 2020 from: https://www.haujournal.org/index.php/hau/issue/view/hau10.3.

TIKU, O., & SHIMIZU, T. (2020). Tourism, Accommodation, and the Regional Economy in Indonesia's West Papua. Island Studies Journal, 15(2), 315-334. Retrieved 27 November 2020 from: https://www.islandstudies.ca/node/538.

USHER, T., & SUTER, E. (2020). The Asmat-Muli Languages of Southwestern New Guinea. Language and Linguistics in Melanesia, 38, 148-175. Retrieved 25 February 2021 from: https://www.langlxmelanesia.com/llm-vol-38-2020.

VANDERPUTTE, L. (2020). Le multilinguisme à l'épreuve des idéologies et représentations des acteurs sociaux: La politique linguistique éducative du Vanuatu. Le Journal de la Société des

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Océanistes(2/151), 271-284. Dossier: Hommage à Françoise Ozanne-Rivierre et à Jean-Claude Rivierre: Linguistique et anthropologie linguistique océanienne.

WACALIE, F. (2020). L'héritage de Jean-Claude Rivierre dans l'extrême sud de la Nouvelle-Calédonie. Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes(2/151), 263-270. Dossier: Hommage à Françoise Ozanne- Rivierre et à Jean-Claude Rivierre: Linguistique et anthropologie linguistique océanienne.

WEST, P. (2020). Becoming through the Mundane: Asylum Seekers and the Making of Selves in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 468-476.

WEST, P., & AINI, J. (2021). "I Will Be Travelling to Kavieng!" Work, Labour and Inequality in New Ireland, Papua New Guinea. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 47-75). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

WIESSNER, P. (2020). The Role of Third Parties in Norm Enforcement in Customary Courts among the Enga of Papua New Guinea. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Early edition, 1-9. Doi: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2014759117.

ZIMMER-TAMAKOSHI, L. (2021). Transforming Inequalities and Uncertainty: Gender, Generational and Class Dimensions in the Gende's Longue Durée. In N. A. Baiton, D. Mcdougall, K. Elexeyeff & J. Cox (Eds.), Unequal Lives: Gender, Race and Class in the Western Pacific (pp. 305-333). Canberra: ANU Press. Retrieved 18 January 2021 from: http://doi.org/10.22459/UE.2020.

MELANESIA / BOOKS

GRAVELAT, C. (2020). The Role of the United Nations in New Caledonia's Process of Self-determination. Canberra: Department of Pacific Affairs, ANU. Translated from the original French version. Discussion Paper No. 2020/4. Rtrieved 8 February 2021 from: http://dpa.bellschool.anu.edu.au/ssgm-research-communication/discussion-paper-series.

KULICK, D. (2019). A Death in the Rainforest: How a Language and a Way of Life Came to an End in Papua New Guinea. Chapel Hill: Algonquin Books. Reviews: Hau: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, 10(2), 2020, Section Book Symposium: 646-649 (by D. Gewertz and F. Errington: Risky research in the rainforest); 650-655 (by J. Slotta: Endangered languages and porous selves); 656-659 (by A. Duranti: Not being boring and other challenges for anthropologists as popular writers); 660-663 (by J. Leach: The mystery of the dying language); 664-669 (by D. Kulick: On the vicissitudes of publishing, and the riskiness of humor); Sapiens: Anthropology Magazine: https://www.sapiens.org/language/tayap-don-kulick/ (by S. Chao: What's Left Unsaid When a Language Dies); Pacific Affairs, 93(4), 2020: 874-876 (by D. Lipset).

MAY, R. J. (2020). Politics in Papua New Guinea 2017-20: From O'Neill to Marape. Canberra: Department of Pacific Affairs, ANU. Discussion Paper No. 2020/3. Retrieved 8 February 2021 from: http://dpa.bellschool.anu.edu.au/ssgm-research-communication/discussion-paper-series.

MAY, R. J. (2021). Fifty Years after the "Act of Free Choice": The West Papua Issue in a Regional Context. Canberra: Department of Pacific Affairs, ANU. Discussion Paper No. 2021/1. Retrieved 8 February 2021 from: http://dpa.bellschool.anu.edu.au/ssgm-research-communication/discussion-paper-series.

PANTZ, P.-C. (2020). Self-determination and Electoral Geography in New Caledonia: Political Stasis or Independence? Canberra: Department of Pacific Affairs, ANU. Working Paper No. 2020/5. Retrieved 8 February 2021 from: http://dpa.bellschool.anu.edu.au/ssgm-research- communication/working-paper-series.

TUTUGORO, A. (2021). Incompatible Struggles? Reclaiming Indigenous Sovereignty and Political Sovereignty in Kanaky and/or New Caledonia. Canberra: Department of Pacific Affairs, ANU. Discussion Paper No. 2020/5. Retrieved 8 February 2021 from: http://dpa.bellschool.anu.edu.au/ssgm-research-communication/discussion-paper-series.

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MICRONESIA / ARTICLES

ARRIOLA, T. I. (2020). Scenes from Everyday Life in the during the COVID‐19 Pandemic. Oceania, 90(S1), 41-46. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

BERTA, O. G., BERMAN, E., & LATIOR, A. (2020). COVID‐19 and the Marshallese. Oceania, 90(S1), 53-59. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

KANNGIESER, A. (2020). Weaponizing Ecocide: Nauru, Offshore Incarceration, and Environmental Crisis. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 492-502.

MONTÓN-SUBÍAS, S., MORAGAS, N., & BAYMAN, J. M. (2020). The First Missions in Oceania: Excavations at the Colonial Church and Cemetery of San Dionisio at Humatak (, Mariana Islands). Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2), 62-73. Special issue dedicated to Angela Middleton: The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in Australasia and the Pacific.

ROBINSON, A. L. (2020). Of Monsters and Mothers: Affective Climates and Human-Nonhuman Sociality in Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner's "Dear Matafele Peinam". The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 311-339.

POLYNESIA / ARTICLES

ANDERSON, A., & PETCHEY, F. (2020). The Transfer of Kumara (Ipomoea Batatas) from East to South Polynesia and Its Dispersal in New Zealand. The Journal of the Polynesian Society, 129(4), 351-382.

ANDREEV, A. (2017). A String for Heyerdahl. Bulletin of the International String Figure Association, 24, 185-188.

BEDFORD, S., FLEXNER, J., JONES, M., GARLAND, J., & ALLEN, H. (2020). The Bright Archaeological Light That Was Angela Middleton. Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2), 1-6. Special issue dedicated to Angela Middleton: The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in Australasia and the Pacific.

BOOTH, J., & EDWARDS, B. G. (2020). Middens Historically Significant on a Northland Landscape Are Key to Demonstrating Ecological Degradation in an Adjacent Estuary. Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2), 115-123. Special issue dedicated to Angela Middleton: The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in Australasia and the Pacific.

CARLSON, T. (2019). Mana Motuhake o Ngati Porou: Decolonising Health Literacy. Sites: A Journal of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies, 16(2), 77-103. Retrieved 18 February 2021 from: https://sites.otago.ac.nz/Sites/issue/view/47.

CUNNINGHAM, R., STANLEY, J., HAITANA, T., PITAMA, S., CROWE, M., MULDER, R., et al. (2020). The Physical Health of Maori with Bipolar Disorder. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 54(11), 1107-1114.

DYE, T., & KAHN, J. G. (2020). Functional Classification of Hawaiian Curved-edge Adzes and Gouges. Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2), 124-132. Special issue dedicated to Angela Middleton: The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in Australasia and the Pacific.

EMILIATA, T., ASEM, P., LEVI, J., IOSUA, T., IOANE, A., SEUPOAI, V., et al. (2020). Capturing the Experiences of Samoa: The Changing Food Environment and Food Security in Samoa during the COVID‐19 Pandemic. Oceania, 90(S1), 116-125. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

ENARI, D., & FA'AEA, A. M. (2020). E tumau le fa'avae ae fesuia'i faiga [The foundation remains but the ways of doing change]: Pasifika Resilience During COVID‐19. Oceania, 90(S1), 75-80. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

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FALEOLO, R. (2019). Understanding Pacific Island Well-being Perspectives through Samoan and Tongan Material Cultural Adaptations and Spatial Behaviour in Auckland and Brisbane. Sites: A Journal of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies, 16(2), 37-76. Retrieved 18 February 2021 from: https://sites.otago.ac.nz/Sites/issue/view/47.

FALEOLO, R. L. (2020). Tongan Collective Mobilities: Familial Intergenerational Connections before, during, and post COVID‐19. Oceania, 90(S1), 128-138. Special issue: Oceanic Societies in COVID‐19, edited by Ute Eickelkamp and Sophie Chao.

FETVADJIEV, V. H., NEHA, T., VAN DE VIJVER, F. J. R., MCMANUS, M., & MEIRING, D. (2021). The Cross-cultural Relevance of Indigenous Measures: The South African Personality Inventory (SAPI), Family Orientation, and Well-being in New Zealand. Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 52(1), 3-21.

GIORGIO, A., & HOUKAMAU, C. (2021). Hybrid Identities: Maori Italians Challenging Racism and the Maori/Pakeha Binary. Social Identities, 27(1), 20-43.

GUMBLEY, W., WILLIAMS, L., & GAINSFORD, M. (2020). Bringing Christ to Whaingaroa: Te Nihinihi Wesleyan Mission Station at Raglan, New Zealand. Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2), 47-61. Special issue dedicated to Angela Middleton: The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in Australasia and the Pacific.

HILSENROTH, J., GROGAN, K. A., & FRAZER, T. K. (2021). Assessing the Effects of Increasing Surface Seawater Temperature on Black Pearl Production in : A Bioeconomic Simulation. Ecological Economics((181)), 1-10. Ejournal: Article 106914.

KAEPPLER, A. L., & VAN TILBURG, J. A. (2020). Carved Komari (Vulva) Stones from Rapa Nui: Museum Objects, Legacy Data and Contemporary Local History The Journal of the Polynesian Society, 129(4), 383-406.

KENNEMORE, A., & POSTERO, N. (2020). Reflections on Collaborative Ethnography and Decolonization in Latin America, Aotearoa, and Beyond. Commoning Ethnography, 3(1), 25-58.

LAGARDE, L., NOLET, É., & MOLLE, G. (2020). Hokikakika: History and Archaeology of a Catholic Village in the Eastern Tuamotus. Journal of Pacific Archaeology, 11(2), 74-89. Special issue dedicated to Angela Middleton: The Archaeology of Missions and Missionisation in Australasia and the Pacific.

MATERA, J. (2020). Bridging Traditional and Scientific Knowledge of Climate Change: Understanding Change through the Lives of Small Island Communities. Human Ecology, 48(5), 529-538.

MATIKA, C. M., HOUKAMAU, C. A., & SIBLEY, C. G. (2021). New Zealand's Waitangi Day Divided? Support for National Day Predicts In-group and Out-group Warmth for Pakeha But Only In-group Warmth for Maori. International Journal of Intercultural Relations(80), 64-77.

MAURER, A. (2020). Snaring the Nuclear Sun: Decolonial Ecologies in Titaua Peu's Mutismes: E 'Ore te Vava. The Contemporary Pacific, 32(2), 371-397.

MELKA, T. S., & SCHOCH, R. M. (2020). Exploring a Mysterious Tablet from Easter Island: The Issues of Authenticity and Falsifiability in Rongorongo. Cryptologia, 44(6), 481-544.

MONNERIE, D. (2020). Une approche socio-cosmique de la société de Wallis et de sa colonisation. Le Journal de la Société des Océanistes(2/151), 307-312. Review article of: Sophie Chave-Dartoen, Royauté, chefferie et monde socio-cosmique à Wallis ('Uvea): Dynamiques sociales et pérennité des institutions (Marseille: Pacific-CREDO Publications, 2017).

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