Thesis ID: CBB001567550

Pacifically Possessed: Scientific Production and Native Hawaiian Critique of the “Almost White” Polynesian Race (2013)

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Arvin, Maile Renee (Author)


University of California, San Diego
Ferreira da Silva, Denise
Imada, Adria
Yang, K. Wayne
Gere, Catherina
Imada, Adria
Smith, Andrea
Yang, K. Wayne
Frank, Ross
Gere, Catherina
Smith, Andrea


Publication Date: 2013
Edition Details: Advisor: Frank, Ross, Ferreira da Silva, Denise; Committee Members: Gere, Catherina, Imada, Adria, Smith, Andrea, Yang, K. Wayne.
Physical Details: 321 pp.
Language: English

This dissertation analyzes how scientific knowledge has represented the Polynesian race as an essentially mixed, "almost white" race. Nineteenth and twentieth century scientific literature--spanning the disciplines of ethnology, physical anthropology, sociology and genetics--positioned Polynesians as the biological relatives of Caucasians. Scientific proof of this relationship allowed scientists, policymakers, and popular media to posit European and American settler colonialism in the Pacific as a peaceful and natural fulfillment of a biological destiny. Understanding knowledge as an important agent of settler colonial possession--in the political as well as supernatural, haunting connotations of that word-- this project seeks to understand how Polynesians (with a particular focus on Native Hawaiians) have been bodily "possessed," along with the political and economic possession of their lands. Thus, the project traces a logic of "possession through whiteness" in which Polynesians were once, and under the salutary influence of settler colonialism, will again be white. The project's analysis coheres around four figures of the "almost white" Polynesian race: the ancestrally white Polynesian of ethnology and Aryanism (1830s-1870s), the Part-Hawaiian of physical anthropology and eugenics (1910s-1920s), the mixed-race "Hawaiian girl" of sociology (1930s-1940s), and the mixed-race, soon-to-be white (again) Polynesian of genetics, whose full acceptance in Hawai`i seemed to provide a model of racial harmony to the world (1950s). Rather than attempting to uncover "racist" scientific practices, the project reveals how historical scientific literature produced knowledge about the Polynesian race that remains important in how Native Hawaiians are recognized (and misrecognized) in contemporary scientific, legal and cultural spheres. In addition to the historical analysis, the project also examines contemporary Native Hawaiian responses to the logic of possession through whiteness. These include regenerative actions that radically displace whiteness, such as contemporary relationship building between Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders. At the same time, other regenerative actions attempt to reproduce Native Hawaiian-ness with a standard of racial purity modeled on whiteness, including legal fights waged over blood quantum legislation. Overall, the project provides a scientific genealogy as to how Polynesians have been recognized as "almost white," and questions under what conditions this possessive recognition can be refused.

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Description Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 74/10(E), Apr 2014. Proquest Document ID: 1420350880.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001567550/

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Authors & Contributors
Bonmassar, Michele
Adams, Andrea
Livio Sansone
Zumwalt, Rosemary Lévy
Ulrich Kattmann
Summers, Lachlan
Concepts
Science and race
Racism
Anthropology
Indigenous peoples; indigeneity
Science and politics
Genetics
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
20th century, early
18th century
Places
United States
Germany
Italy
Southern states (U.S.)
Tasmania (Australia)
New York City (New York, U.S.)
Institutions
Kingdom of Italy (1861-1946)
Columbia University
American Museum of Natural History, New York
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