“The Polynesian Problem”: Western Studies of Pacific Islander Origins
Hours: | 6pm-7pm |
Ages: | Teens, Adults |
In/Outdoor: | Indoor, Outdoor |
Cost: | Free see below |
Category: | Arts & Culture |
From Europeans’ earliest encounters with the Pacific, White Europeans expressed a fascination and partial identification with the racial origins of Polynesians.
Polynesians seemed to represent “natural man” in the purest state.
In nineteenth- and early twentieth-century social-scientific studies, Polynesian origins became the subject of intense scrutiny and debate.
Physical anthropologists such as Louis R.
Sullivan declared Polynesians to be conditionally Caucasian.
Maile Arvin will discuss this history from a Native Hawaiian feminist perspective, attentive to the ways Polynesians have challenged and appropriated such ideas.
Maile Arvin, Assistant Professor of History and Gender Studies, University of Utah.
Advanced registration required.
Click here to register for this free virtual event.
Registration closes 30 minutes before start time.
Presented by the Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology and Harvard Museums of Science & Culture.
COST | ↑ top |
FREE Register Here
WEBSITE | ↑ top |
hmsc.harvard.edu/Polynesian-Problem
LOCATION | ↑ top |
1 Oxford St, Cambridge, MA, 02138 map
Phone: 617-496-1638
RELATED LINKS | ↑ top |
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