2003 15(1) &15(2)
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| Spring 15(1) Editor’s Note Vilsoni Hereniko Articles Decolonizing Pacific Studies: Indigenous Perspectives, Knowledge, and Wisdom in Higher Education Konai Helu Thaman Beyond the “English Method of Tattooing”: Decentering the Practice of History in Oceania David Hanlon Between Knowledges: Pacific Studies and Academic Disciplines Edvard Hviding Interdisciplinary Approaches in Pacific Studies: Understanding the Fiji Coup of 19 May 2000 Vilsoni Hereniko Honoring the Past and Creating the Future in Hyperspace: New Technologies and Cultural Specificity Marsha Kinder Net Gains? Pacific Studies in Cyberspace Terence Wesley-Smith Future Directions for Pacific Studies Stewart Firth Political Reviews Micronesia in Review: Issues and Events, 1 July 2001 to 30 June 2002 Anne Perez Hattori, Samuel F McPhetres, Donald Shuster Polynesia in Review: Issues and Events, 1 July 2001 to 30 June 2002 Frédéric Angleviel, Tracie Ku‘uipo Cummings, Kerry James, Jon Tikivanotau M Jonassen, Margaret Mutu Book and Media Reviews Remembrance of Pacific Pasts: An Invitation to Remake History, edited by Robert Borofsky Reviewed by Gina Balawanilotu, Anurag Subramani, and Robert Nicole Government by the Gun: The Unfinished Business of Fiji’s 2000 Coup, by Robbie Robertson and William Sutherland Reviewed by Roderic Alley Perilous Memories: The Asia-Pacific War(s), edited by Takashi Fujitani, Geoffrey M White, and Lisa Yoneyama Reviewed by Lin Poyer Fighting the Enemy: Australian Soldiers and Their Adversaries in World War II, by Mark Johnston Reviewed by Hugh Laracy In Colonial New Guinea: Anthropological Perspectives, edited by Naomi M McPherson Reviewed by Frederick Errington Ethnographic Artifacts: Challenges to a Reflexive Anthropology, edited by Sjoerd R Jaarsma and Marta A Rohatynskyj Reviewed by Claudia Gross Dancing Through Time: A Sepik Cosmology, by Borut Telban Reviewed by Joel Robbins Stories from the Marshall Islands: Bwebwenato Jan Aelon Kein, by Jack A Tobin Reviewed by Michael A Rynkiewich Reimagining the American Pacific: From South Pacific to Bamboo Ridge and Beyond, by Rob Wilson Reviewed by Susan M Schultz A Remarkable Journey, by Lady Carol Kidu Reviewed by Regis Tove Stella Chalo Jahaji: On a Journey through Indenture in Fiji, by Brij V Lal Reviewed by Sudesh Mishra Dauka Puran, by Subramani Reviewed by Brij V Lal Faces of the Spirits: The Sulka People of Papua New Guinea Reviewed by Naomi M McPherson Ke Kūlana He Māhū: Remembering a Sense of Place Reviewed by Ty Tengan Featured Artist: John Pule John Pule was born in 1962 in Liku, Niue. In 1964 he went to live in Auckland, where he still resides. Pule is a novelist, poet, painter, and multimedia performance artist. This issue features Pule’s painting. Internationally recognized, Pule’s art has appeared in the Museum of Australia in Sydney (1998); the Australia National Gallery in Canberra (2000); the Wellington Art Museum, New Zealand (2000); and the Auckland Toi Tamaki Art Museum (solo exhibition 2000); as well as in galleries in Korea, South Africa, and Hawai‘i. | Fall 15(2) Articles Money Laundering, Global Financial Instability, and Tax Havens in the Pacific Islands Anthony B van Fossen Between Gifts and Commodities: Commercial Enterprise and the Trader’s Dilemma on Wallis (‘Uvea) Paul van der GrijpIs There a Tongan Middle Class? Hierarchy and Protest in Contemporary Tonga Kerry James Dialogue Cultural Studies for Oceania Houston Wood Resources Albert Wendt: Bibliography Paul Sharrad and Karen M Peacock Political Reviews The Region in Review: International Issues and Events, 2002 Karin von Strokirch Melanesia in Review: Issues and Events, 2002 David Chappell, James Chin, Anita Jowitt, Asinate Mausio Book and Media Reviews Talk-in’ Up to the White Woman: Indigenous Women and Feminism, by Aileen Moreton-Robinson Reviewed by Haunani-Kay Trask Body Trade: Captivity, Cannibalism, and Colonialism in the Pacific, edited by Barbara Creed and Jeanette Hoorn Reviewed by Shirley Lindenbaum Mr. Tulsi’s Store: A Fijian Journey, by Brij V Lal Reviewed by Andrew Arno Represented Communities: Fiji and World Decolonization, by John D Kelly and Martha Kaplan Reviewed by James West Turner Protection of Intellectual, Biological, and Cultural Property in Papua New Guinea, edited by Kathy Whimp and Mark Busse Reviewed by Sjoerd R Jaarsma Hawaii’s Russian Adventure: A New Look at Old History, by Peter R Mills Reviewed by Susan A Lebo An Honorable Accord: The Covenant between the Northern Mariana Islands and the United States, by Howard P Widens and Deanne C Siemer Reviewed by Ed King For the Good of Mankind: A History of the People of Bikini and Their Islands, by Jack Niedenthal Reviewed by Robert C Kiste Modekngei: A New Religion in Belau, Micronesia, by Machiko Aoyagi Reviewed by Kazumi Nishihara Oceania: An Introduction to the Cultures and Identities of Pacific Islanders, by Andrew Strathern, Pamela J Stewart, Laurence M Carucci, Lin Poyer, Richard Feinberg, and Cluny Macpherson Reviewed by Gene Ogan Birthing in the Pacific: Beyond Tradition and Modernity? edited by Vicki Lukere and Margaret Jolly Reviewed by Judith C Barker Village on the Edge: Changing Times in Papua New Guinea, by Michael French Smith Reviewed by Nancy McDowell La tradition et l’État: Églises, pouvoirs et politiques culturelles dans le Pacifique, edited by Christine Hamelin and Éric Wittersheim Reviewed by Eric Waddell Alchemies of Distance, by Caroline Sinavaiana-Gabbard Reviewed by Paul Sharrad Kalahele, by Imaikalani Kalahele Reviewed by Steven Winduo The Art of Tivaevae: Traditional Cook Islands Quilting, by Lynnsay Rongokea Reviewed by Anne E Guernsey Allen Kula: Myth and Magic in the Trobriand Islands, by Jutta Malnic, with John Kasaipwalova, and Kula: Ring of Power Reviewed by Susanne Kuehling Featured Artist: Kapulani Landgraf Kapulani Landgraf was born and raised in Pu‘ahu‘ula, Kane‘ohe, on the windward side of O‘ahu. Landgraf’s 1994 book, Nā Wahi Pana o Ko‘olau Poko: The Legendary Places of Ko‘olau Poko (Honolulu: University of Hawai‘i Press), was the winner of Ka Palapala Po‘okela Award for Excellence in Illustrative Books. Her work has been shown in Alaska, Arizona, British Colombia, Hawai‘i, New Mexico, New York, Oklahoma, Ontario, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Vermont, Washington, and Germany. She currently teaches photography at Kapi‘olani Community College and Windward Community College. |


