Beyond the beach? Re-articulating the limen in oceanic pasts, presents, and futures

Margaret Jolly*

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    4 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    This chapter begins with the author's recollection of reading Greg Dening's Readings/Writings in the summer of 1999. She retells this story not just to pay homage to Dening and his apical importance in the genealogy of those who have been exploring similar questions in Oceania, but to pose the problem of the relation between embodied experiences and encounters on the many beaches of Oceania and the central values that suffuse Dening's concept of “the beach, a limen where everyday understandings are displaced, where crossings occur, cross-cultural even transcultural encounters, where the exchange of bodies and meanings subverts taken-for-granted understandings and creates the potential for profound and mutual transformation.” The chapter then considers the story of two indigenous beach crossers, privileged in most retellings of cross-cultural encounters in the Pacific, Mai and Tupaia. These two Polynesian men were not only central to Dening's narratives in his 2004 book Beach Crossings, they have also become icons in their crossing of that space between the Oceanic and the European worlds of the late 1700s.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationChanging Contexts, Shifting Meanings
    Subtitle of host publicationTransformations of Cultural Traditions in Oceania
    PublisherUniversity of Hawai’i Press
    Pages56-73
    Number of pages18
    ISBN (Print)9780824833664
    Publication statusPublished - 2011

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