All Things Go in Pairs, or the Sharks Will Bite: The Antithetical Nature of Fijian Chiefship
Via an historical-cum-ethnographic analysis of the history of chiefship in the vanua (country) of Sawaieke, central Fiji, this essay argues against the prevailing view that Fijian social relations are fundamentally hierarchical. Rather social relations in general and chiefship in particular are pred...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Oceania 1994-03, Vol.64 (3), p.197-216 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Via an historical-cum-ethnographic analysis of the history of chiefship in the vanua (country) of Sawaieke, central Fiji, this essay argues against the prevailing view that Fijian social relations are fundamentally hierarchical. Rather social relations in general and chiefship in particular are predicated on complementary and opposing concepts of equality and hierarchy, such that neither can become, in Dumont's terms, 'an encompassing value'. This radical opposition between equality and hierarchy, Hegelian in form, is fundamental to Fijian dualism, so it pervades Fijian daily life and informs, for example, sexual relations, kinship, chiefship and notions of the person. 'The household' is the basic kinship unit and while relations within households are hierarchical, relations across households are those of balanced reciprocal exchange, epitomised in the relation between cross-cousins as equals and affines. The analysis shows that Fijian chiefship—past or present–cannot, as 'value', encompass the pervasive antithesis between hierarchy and equality. Rather its efficacy and its continuity require that hierarchy and equality remain in tension with one another as opposing, and equally important, concepts of social relations. |
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ISSN: | 0029-8077 1834-4461 |
DOI: | 10.1002/j.1834-4461.1994.tb02465.x |