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Manifestations of Mana: Political Power and Divine Inspiration in Polynesia Volume 9 [Minkštas viršelis]

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The author states in the first chapter that people in all societal roles "...create stories or myths in which they hide their own personal or group intentions. These stories or myths are not only works of art of the human mind, but when they are successfully told within the context of, or directly concern power relationships, the narrator may be attributed mana." This study explores Polynesian society's beliefs, realities, religion, confrontation with Christianity, and modern chiefdom state. Distributed in the US by ISBS. Annotation ©2014 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

Today, the political arena in the Pacific - although occupied by presidents, members of parliament, and court justices - is still ruled by chiefs with their authority by tradition, including the notion of mana, which may be defined as divine inspiration or energy that manifests itself in persons, objects, places, and natural phenomena. Polynesian chiefs have mana because of their descent from ancient gods. Other key concepts - such as asymmetrical ideology, mythical constructions of social reality, and social drama - are elaborated and applied to a wide specter of ethnographic examples. This book explores the role of mana in past and present configurations of chiefly power in the Pacific region, where the chief is often seen as the transitional figure between traditional (tribal or feudal) and modern forms of leadership, the latter characterized by rationality and the nation-state with its accompanying bureaucracy. The configuration and reconfiguration of Tongan chieftaincy and kingship are analyzed as an extended case study of the gradual, and sometimes shock-like, integration of a Polynesian culture into a global structure - a nation-state partly imposed from the outside (colonization, missionary influences, etc.), but also generated from within, including state formation and the recent quest for democracy. Together with other Polynesian examples, this forms a relevant illustration of both continuity and change in the configuration of mana and chieftaincy in processes of globalization in the Pacific. (Series: Comparative Anthropological Studies in Society, Cosmology and Politics - Vol. 9)
Chapter 1 The Hidden Parts of Power
9(24)
Unspoken dimensions of societal discourse
9(5)
Accepting, or not, one's own dominated position
14(6)
Privileged relations with invisible forces
20(4)
Social asymmetry in Sacred Gift Exchange
24(5)
Processes of signification and asymmetrical ideology
29(4)
Chapter 2 Contextualizing Polynesia in the Pacific
33(18)
Ascribed Pacific and Polynesian identities
33(6)
Naturalist ideas projected on the Pacific
39(4)
The real discoverers of Polynesia
43(3)
Culture contacts and confrontations
46(5)
Chapter 3 Mana, or the Idea of Divine Inspiration
51(14)
A pan-Polynesian set of ideas
52(2)
Difficulties in fixing the meaning of mana
54(1)
Three classic interpretations of mana
55(3)
Localization of mana in the human body
58(1)
Mana in material objects
59(1)
The mana-tapu complex and related notions
60(3)
Images of abundance
63(2)
Chapter 4 Mythical Constructions of Polynesian Realities
65(22)
Folk-beliefs and historical coincidence
66(4)
Historical configurations and Reconfigurations of Power
70(5)
Myth and cultural transformations
75(5)
Religion, myth and science
80(4)
Individual freedom as opposed to taboo
84(3)
Chapter 5 The Religious Grounds of Chiefly Power
87(26)
A Polynesian pantheon and its chiefly offspring
88(4)
Divine cannibalism, asymmetrical ideology and power
92(3)
Original gods, soul gods, and nasty spirits
95(5)
Ancient Tongan priests and European proselytizers
100(3)
The god in the priest's body
103(3)
Religious specialists and their European counterparts
106(2)
The divine origins of three chiefly lines
108(2)
Loyalty accompanied by coercion
110(3)
Chapter 6 Strategic Murders and Social Drama
113(24)
Disharmony arising in conflict situations
113(4)
A contested female chief: Tupoumoheofo
117(5)
The fate of a cruel ruler: Tuku'aho
122(3)
The second murder: Tupouniua
125(5)
A chain of disharmonic phases
130(3)
Centralization of power and decline of the Tu'i Tonga
133(4)
Chapter 7 First Missionary Dramas in Western Polynesia
137(20)
A Tongan point of view
138(2)
Missionaries and beachcombers in Tonga
140(3)
Early confrontations between missionaries, beachcombers and Tongans
143(4)
Temptations of the flesh and first martyrs of Polynesia
147(3)
Overlapping but independent social dramas
150(3)
Rivalry among representatives of western culture
153(4)
Chapter 8 Armed Threats and Divine Arguments
157(26)
Establishment of British Methodist missionaries
159(4)
Threats, violence and centralization of power
163(7)
Initial failure of the Methodist mission
170(4)
The European god would be far wiser and better
174(2)
The balance of power and the role of the bible in warfare
176(3)
Transition from a local religious system towards Christianity
179(4)
Chapter 9 Christian Confrontations in Paradise
183(30)
Intervention in local political affairs
183(4)
First efforts to establish a Catholic mission in Tonga
187(2)
Second effort to establish a Catholic mission
189(6)
Involvement of the Catholic mission in the ongoing wars
195(2)
Further diffusion of Catholicism
197(4)
The ideological struggle between Protestant and Catholic missions
201(4)
Judgments and prejudices between missionaries and Tongans
205(4)
A political and not a religious war
209(4)
Chapter 10 The Making of a Modern Chiefdom State
213(16)
Transition towards modernity
213(4)
External promotion of a pan-Polynesian movement
217(3)
A mediator between king and colonists
220(5)
The clash of imperialist interests and the division of the Pacific
225(4)
Chapter 11 Foreign Interventions in Pacific State Affairs
229(24)
King Tupou II and the 'Treaty of Friendship'
230(4)
The threat of British annexation
234(3)
New British interventions in Tongan state affairs
237(5)
Indigenous appropriation of commerce
242(4)
Decolonization and integration in state structures
246(4)
Colonization in terms of expenses and benefits
250(3)
Chapter 12 Middle Classes, Mana and Democracy
253(24)
New social classes and accompanying contradictions
253(4)
Social movements by emerging middle classes
257(3)
National identity for sale
260(3)
Mismanagement, corruption, and civil servants' salaries
263(3)
The rise and tragic end of a people's prince
266(4)
The ransacking of a city center
270(7)
Chapter 13 Rank and Social Distance
277(8)
From head of state to opposition leader
277(3)
Inversion of normal behavior
280(5)
Bibliography 285(32)
Index 317