Gift Exchange and Interpretations of Captain Cook in the Traditional Kingdoms of the Hawaiian Islands

The relationship between the kanaka maoli people of the traditional kingdoms of the Hawaiian Islands and Captain James Cook and his crew is interpreted in the context of a theory of gift exchange. It is argued that interpretations of kanaka maoli behaviour based on an implicit assumption that social...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of Pacific history 2011-12, Vol.46 (3), p.275-292
1. Verfasser: Dye, Thomas S.
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description The relationship between the kanaka maoli people of the traditional kingdoms of the Hawaiian Islands and Captain James Cook and his crew is interpreted in the context of a theory of gift exchange. It is argued that interpretations of kanaka maoli behaviour based on an implicit assumption that social relations were structured primarily by property rights leads to error. Instead, sense can be made of kanaka maoli behaviour only if a logic based on rights of person is taken into account.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Bartering
Behavior
Biography
Canoes
Ceremonial exchange
Commodity exchanges
Commodity markets
Cook, James
Cook, James (1728-1779)
Cultural contact
Death
Economic anthropology
Economic behaviour
Exchange
Exploration
Gift
Gift Giving
Gifts
Hawaii
Hawaiians
Historical anthropology
History
Interpersonal relations
Islands
Kanaka
Kingdoms
Larceny
Native peoples
Pacific Ocean region: Culture
Pacific Ocean region: History
Polynesian studies
Private property
Property
Property Rights
Rights
Ritual exchange
Social interaction
Swine
title Gift Exchange and Interpretations of Captain Cook in the Traditional Kingdoms of the Hawaiian Islands
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