Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 240
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-8476-9140-1 • Hardback • June 1999 • $135.00 • (£104.00)
978-0-8476-9141-8 • Paperback • May 1999 • $60.00 • (£46.00)
978-0-7425-7717-6 • eBook • May 1999 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
Houston Wood spent many years as a macadamia nut farmer on the island of Hawaii. He is the coauthor of The Reality of Ethnomethodology and now teaches English at Hawaii Pacific University.
Chapter 1 Orientation: Recovering Hawaiian Winds
Part 2 From Conquest to Anti-Conquest
Chapter 3 The Violent Rhetoric of Names
Chapter 4 Captain James Cook, Rhetorician
Chapter 5 The Kama'aina Anti-Conquest
Chapter 6 Disorientation: Unwritable Knowledge
Part 7 Displacing Three Hawaiian Places
Chapter 8 Displacing Pele: Hawai'i's Volcanoes in a Contact Zone
Chapter 9 Echo Tourism: The Narrative of Nostalgia in Waikiki
Chapter 10 Safe Savagery: Hollywood's Hawai'i
Chapter 11 Reorientation: New Histories, New Hopes
Part 12 Polyrhetoric as Critical Traditionalismism
Chapter 13 Kaho'olawe in Polyrhetoric and Monorhetoric
Chapter 14 Hawai'i in Cyberspace
Chapter 15 Coda
Chapter 16 Filmography
Wood's book offers very strong critical analyses of dominant cultural productions and discursive struggles, with a central focus on the contested terrain of representation. Displacing Natives is an excellent choice for courses that focus on on US colonialism, Hawaiian Studies, literary and visual representations of indigenous peoples, and ethnic studies. In this time of 'ena makani (stormy winds) it is important to see a scholarly work that explains the enduring process by which Hawaiian indigeneity is continuously effaced in and through the dominant popular culture.
— The Contemporary Pacific
Wood's original and insightful work on Hawaii is sure to engage a wide variety of readers, from those interested in Pacific literature and postcolonial studies to haoles who have decided to make this unique place their home.
— Review of Communication
This book is an account of the historical formation of Hawai'i that directly challenges the ever onward and upward unfolding of history embedded in the principal texts on Hawaiian history that have long been and remain the dominant interpretations. Wood traces the history of and acutely analyzes diverse practices that dispossessed and displaced native culture.
— The Hawaiian Journal Of History