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Defiant Indigeneity
Defiant Indigeneity
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Defiant Indigeneity

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Aloha is at once the most significant and the most misunderstood word in the Indigenous Hawaiian lexicon. For Knaka Maoli people, the concept of aloha is a representation and articulation of their identity, despite its misappropriation and commandeering by non-Native audiences in the form of things like the hula girl of popular culture. Considering the way aloha is embodied, performed, and interpreted in Native Hawaiian literature, music, plays, dance, drag performance, and even ghost tours from the twentieth century to the present, Stephanie Nohelani Teves shows that misunderstanding of the concept by non-Native audiences has not prevented the Knaka Maoli from using it to create and empower community and articulate its distinct Indigenous meaning.While Native Hawaiian artists, activists, scholars, and other performers have labored to educate diverse publics about the complexity of Indigenous Hawaiian identity, ongoing acts of violence against Indigenous communities have undermined these efforts. In this multidisciplinary work, Teves argues that Indigenous peoples must continue to embrace the performance of their identities in the face of this violence in order to challenge settler-colonialism and its efforts to contain and commodify Hawaiian Indigeneity.
Undertitel
The Politics of Hawaiian Performance
ISBN
9781469640570
Språk
Engelska
Utgivningsdatum
2018-04-09
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  • Epub - Adobe DRM
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