HE ĀNUENUE PIʻO I LUNA O KOʻOLAUPOKO: Ethnography of Koʻolaupoko as a Native Hawaiian Cultural Complex of Resilience.

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Abstract/Contents

Abstract
Measuring the health, vibrance, and the body politic of Indigenous communities is a task best approached by nuance and complexity. This paper strategically envisions pathways of Native Hawaiian resilience and revival through the community, identity, tradition, and landmarks of the district of Koʻolaupoko on the Eastern side of Oʻahu, a place where settler colonialism, development, and Indigeneity come into conflict with one another. This paper fortifies and campaigns for the assessment and value of Indigenous community and cultural health via the vibrance of ancestral pathways. These pathways manifest as links between two physical spaces, humans and natural phenomena, ancestors and grandchildren, heavens and earth, spirits and materials. This paper shows that pathways continue to thrive and be reawakened by Native Hawaiians who inhabit these lands through physical presence, genealogical connection, and participation in local lineages of Indigenous knowledge.

Description

Type of resource text
Date created [ca. May 2022]
Date modified December 5, 2022
Publication date June 9, 2022; June 8, 2022

Creators/Contributors

Author Seto Myers, Dryden Kuehuikapono
Thesis advisor Ebron, Paulla

Subjects

Subject Indigenous peoples > Civil rights
Subject Native Hawaiians
Subject Native language and education
Subject Indigenous peoples
Subject Oahu
Subject Hawaii > Kailua (Oahu)
Genre Text
Genre Thesis

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial No Derivatives 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-ND).

Preferred citation

Preferred citation
Seto Myers, D. (2022). HE ĀNUENUE PIʻO I LUNA O KOʻOLAUPOKO: Ethnography of Koʻolaupoko as a Native Hawaiian Cultural Complex of Resilience.. Stanford Digital Repository. Available at https://purl.stanford.edu/wx199ww1547

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Undergraduate Research Papers, Department of Anthropology, Stanford University.

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