Headhunting In The Solomon Islands: Around The Coral Sea

Headhunting In The Solomon Islands: Around The Coral Sea
Title Headhunting In The Solomon Islands: Around The Coral Sea PDF eBook
Author Caroline Mytinger
Publisher Pickle Partners Publishing
Pages 559
Release 2016-01-18
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 1786257815

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More than 80 years ago, Caroline Mytinger, a portrait artist, and her childhood friend Margaret Warner set out by freighter from San Francisco with little more than $400 in their pocket and a tin of paints to their name. Their objective was to paint portraits of the tribal people of Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands before the encroachment of modern, European-style culture changed their lives forever. This gripping book tells of the two women’s experiences whilst travelling through Melanesia between 1926 and 1930.

A Naturalist Among the Head-hunters

A Naturalist Among the Head-hunters
Title A Naturalist Among the Head-hunters PDF eBook
Author Charles Morris Woodford
Publisher London ; Liverpool : Philip
Pages 350
Release 1890
Genre Ethnology
ISBN

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The White Headhunter

The White Headhunter
Title The White Headhunter PDF eBook
Author Nigel Randell
Publisher Hachette UK
Pages 253
Release 2013-08-22
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 1472113322

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Shanghaied in San Francisco in 1868, teenage Scots sailor Jack Renton then found himself on a voyage into the heart of darkness. Escaping from his floating prison in an open whaleboat, Renton drifted for 2000 miles, only to be washed up on the shores of a Pacific island shunned by 19th-century mariners, Malaita in the Solomon Islands. There he was stripped of his clothes by headhunters and forced to 'go native' to survive. Initially a slave to their chief, Kabou, he eventually became the man's most trusted warrior and adviser. Renton's own account of his eight-year exile, published after he was rescued, remains the only authenticated account of a mental and physical ordeal that still haunts the imagination to this day. It caused a sensation at the time, though it is now clear that it airbrushed out most of the key events. Researching the Renton legend, Nigel Randell spent several years talking to the Malaitans and piecing together a very different account from Renton's sanitised version. The ultimate irony is that a man so keen to conceal his 'crimes' should have bequeathed their evidence - a necklace of 60 human teeth - to a collector who donated it to a national museum.

Headhunters, Cannibals and Missionaries of Solomon Islands

Headhunters, Cannibals and Missionaries of Solomon Islands
Title Headhunters, Cannibals and Missionaries of Solomon Islands PDF eBook
Author J M MENZIES
Publisher
Pages 300
Release 2018
Genre
ISBN 9780648206200

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A memoir by his daughter of the Australian missionary Allan Cropp who in 1921 accepted a call to a mission on Buka in the Solomon Islands. His arrival coincided with a period of headhunting, cannibalism, superstition and witchcraft. The book explores in detail the customs, lifestyle, illness and diseases of the indigenous people, and the changes to these through education during the years from 1922 to 1939. It also describes the European lifestyle of that era, including raising a family on the island and the difficulties of returning to Australian life. The book includes a comprehensive dictionary of Petats and English words compiled by Allan and illustrated by Louisa Cropp.

Archaeology of the Solomon Islands

Archaeology of the Solomon Islands
Title Archaeology of the Solomon Islands PDF eBook
Author Richard Walters
Publisher
Pages 200
Release 2017-11
Genre Antiquities, Prehistoric
ISBN 9780947522537

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Archaeology of the Solomon Islands presents the outcome of 20 years research in the Solomon Islands undertaken jointly by Richard Walter and Peter Sheppard, both leaders in the eld of Pacific archaeology. At the time of first European encounter, the peoples of Melanesia exhibited some of the greatest diversity in language, socio-political organisation and culture expression of any region on earth. This extraordinary diversity attracted scholars and resulted in coastal Melanesia becoming the birthplace of modern anthropology, and yet the area remains one of the least well-documented regions of the Pacific in archaeological terms. This synthesis of Solomon Island archaeology draws together all the research that has taken place in the field over the past 50 years. It takes a multidisciplinary theoretical and methodological approach and considers the work of archaeologists, environmental scientists, anthropologists and historians. At the same time this volume highlights the results of the authors own considerable field research. Until recently, much Pacific archaeological research focused primarily on colonisation events and cultural-ecological interactions. Walter and Sheppard are interested too in the long-term development of diversity in coastal Melanesia and in the evolution of traditional Melanesian societies. As a case study they focus on the Roviana Chiefdom, an aggressive but highly successful polity based around headhunting, slave raiding and ritual violence that dominated the political economy of the Western Province into the early twentieth century. They also integrate the Solomon Islands into ongoing models and debates around Pacific culture - history, including in such key areas as human expansion during the Pleistocene, the spread of Austronesians, Lapita colonisation, the development of food production, the role of exchange systems, the concept and meaning of culture areas, and human impact on landscapes and ecosystems. This fascinating and very readable book is written for an archaeological audience but is also designed to be accessible to all readers interested in Pacific archaeology, anthropology and history. Featuring more than a hundred maps and figures, Archaeology of the Solomon Islands represents a ground-breaking contribution to Pacific archaeology.

The Solomon Islands and Their Natives

The Solomon Islands and Their Natives
Title The Solomon Islands and Their Natives PDF eBook
Author Henry Brougham Guppy
Publisher London : S. Sonneschein, Lowrey
Pages 424
Release 1887
Genre Geology
ISBN

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Identity Through History

Identity Through History
Title Identity Through History PDF eBook
Author Geoffrey M. White
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 296
Release 1991
Genre Psychology
ISBN 9780521533324

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For people who live in small communities transformed by powerful outside forces, narrative accounts of culture contact and change create images of collective identity through the idiom of shared history. How may we understand the processes that make such accounts compelling for those who tell them? Why do some narratives acquire a kind of mythic status as they are told and retold in a variety of contexts and genres? Identity Through History attempts to explain how identity formation developed among the people of Santa Isabel in the Solomon Islands who were victimised by raiding headhunters in the nineteenth century, and then embraced Christianity around the turn of the century. Making innovative use of work in psychological and historical anthropology, Geoffrey White shows how these significant events were crucial to the community's view of itself in shifting social and political circumstances.