Oceania in Theory


Volume 26, Numbers 1-2


This issue introduces a range of theoretical possibilities for contemporary Oceania, moving between Western and Pacific ontologies and epistemologies. From the political to the literary, the contributors ask: “how can we theorize Oceanian modernity, ensuring that we reflect and engage without imposing Western models or privileging Western experiences?” They explore, in great depth, what is at stake in the myriad names, such as “South Pacific,” “the South Seas,” and the “Pacific Islands,” often imposed by colonial power structures, which mark the region. Collectively, their responses show how the work of Oceania’s theorists presents a set of challenges and opportunities for those who do not affiliate their work with this under-theorized region of the world.

Contents

MAEBH LONG
Introduction: Oceania in Theory

SUDESH MISHRA
Acts of Rememory in Oceania

SINAVAIANA GABBARD
Samoan Literature and the Wheel of Time: Cartographies of the Vā

MAEBH LONG
Vanua in the Anthropocene: Relationality and Sea Level Rise in Fiji

DAVID O’DONNELL
Where Will This River Flow?’: Modernity, Indigeneity and Eco-crisis in the Theatre of Miria George

PAUL LYONS
John Dominis Holt’s Kanaka Maoli Modernism

MATTHEW HAYWARD
Movies and Pacific Modernities in Wendt and Subramani

LEA LANI KINIKINI KAUVAKA
Oceanian Pain in the Nuclear Epoch, Or: How I Learned to Love Epeli Hau‘ ofas Kisses in the Nederends

COREY WAKELING
Faecebook’: Ironies of Pastoral Narcissism