Description
The title of the book, The Past before Us, refers to the importance of ka wa mamua or "the time in front" in Hawaiian thinking. In this collection of essays, eleven Kanaka 'Oiwi (Native Hawaiian) scholars honor their mo'oku'auhau (geneaological lineage) by using genealogical knowledge drawn from the past to shape their research methodologies. These contributors, Kanaka writing from Hawai'i as well as from the diaspora throughout the Pacific and North America, come from a wide range of backgrounds including activism, grassroots movements, and place-based cultural practice, in addition to academia.
Their work offers broadly applicable yet deeply personal perspectives on complex Hawaiian issues and demonstrates that enduring ancestral ties and relationships to the past are not only relevant, but integral, to contemporary Indigenous scholarship. Chapters on language, literature, cosmology, spirituality, diaspora, identity, relationships, activism, colonialism, and cultural practices unite around methodologies based on mo'oku'auhau. This cultural concept acknowledges the times, people, places, and events that came before; it is a fundamental worldview that guides our understanding of the present and our navigation into the future.
This book is a welcome addition to the growing fields of Indigenous, Pacific Islands, and Hawaiian studies.
Contributors: Hokulani K. Aikau, Marie Alohalani Brown, David A. Chang, Lisa Kahaleole Hall, ku'ualoha ho'omanawanui, Ku Kahakalau, Manulani Aluli Meyer, Kalei Nu'uhiwa, 'Umi Perkins, Mehana Blaich Vaughan, Nalani Wilson-Hokowhitu.
About the Author
Nalani Wilson-Hokowhitu is a research fellow at Te Kotahi Research Institute at the University of Waikato in New Zealand.
Marie Alohalani Brown, assistant professor of religion at the University of Hawai`i at Manoa, holds an MA in Hawaiian language and a PhD in English. She is a specialist in Hawaiian and other Polynesian religions, and in mo`olelo, a narrative genre that includes belief narratives, life writing, and historical treatises.
Book Information
ISBN 9780824873387
Author Nalani Wilson-Hokowhitu
Format Hardback
Page Count 158
Imprint University of Hawai'i Press
Publisher University of Hawai'i Press