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Return to Kahiki
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Table of Contents

Introduction: Mai Kahiki Mai: out from Kahiki; 1. Ke Ao a me Ka Pō: post-millennial thought and Kanaka Foreign Mission work; 2. Among the wild dogs: negotiating the boundaries of Hawaiian Christianity; 3. A kindred people: Hawaiian diplomacy in Sāmoa, 1887; 4. The Hawaiian model: imagining the future of Oceania; 5. 'There is nothing that separates us': John T. Baker and the Pan-Oceanic Lāhui; 6. Makaʻāinana or servants of the dollar? Oceanic and capialist values; Conclusion: the return to Kahiki.

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An important new analysis of Native Hawaiian efforts to construct relationships with other Oceanic peoples as missionaries, diplomats, and tourists.

About the Author

Kealani Cook is an Assistant Professor at the University of Hawaiʻi, West Oʻahu. He is a Kānaka Maoli/Native Hawaiian raised in Waimea, Hawaiʻi Island.

Reviews

'With this remarkable book, Kealani Cook dramatically expands our understanding of the Native Hawaiian and Oceanic past and speaks powerfully to the Pacific present. Meticulously researched and yet sweeping in its scale, Return to Kahiki reveals the often complex, sometimes contradictory, and always fraught way that Hawaiians thought about their place in the Pacific and engaged with other Pacific Islanders.' David A. Chang, University of Minnesota

'In this careful study, Kealani Cook brings to life the whanaungatanga (kinship, relationship) of our Oceanic brothers and sisters. Invoking historical Kanaka projects that retrace centuries-old Oceanic connections in new ways, and for new purpose, he reminds the twenty-first century reader of the lived relationships of our various island kōrero, traditions, and peoples.' Aroha Harris, University of Auckland

'Return to Kahiki ranks among the leading works on Hawaiian historical memory and cultural ties in Oceania. The author also opens a number of avenues for new and important research … Kealani Cook is to be applauded for leading Hawaiian and Pacific history in promising new directions.' Seth Archer, American Historical Review

'Return to Kahiki, as both the title of this book and the kinship intention that informs it, is an important contribution to Oceanic and wider Indigenous scholarship. This book will benefit a wide range of readers, from academic students and teaching staff, to those outside the academy interested in a thoughtful re-framing of Hawaiian relationships in the Pacific.' Hinekura Smith, Journal of New Zealand & Pacific Studies

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