A hard stone people : social relations and the nation state in the Vaturanga District, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands

Studies of nation-states have tended to emphasize how they form a common national culture and the systems and institutions involved. This has included notions about the past, territory, language, and popular culture, among others. Many such studies hypothesize the role of media and publishing in est...

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Main Author: Ryniker, David Craig
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/13159
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-131592018-01-05T17:36:38Z A hard stone people : social relations and the nation state in the Vaturanga District, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands Ryniker, David Craig Studies of nation-states have tended to emphasize how they form a common national culture and the systems and institutions involved. This has included notions about the past, territory, language, and popular culture, among others. Many such studies hypothesize the role of media and publishing in establishing the modern nation-state as a sort of "imagined community" or a "creolized culture." This study, which looks at a local people called the Vaturanga, who live in northwestern Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands, approaches the subject from the point of view of economic and communicative behaviours. It is my contention that the dynamic events and features frequently seen in modern and especially post-colonial nation-states can best be explained by reference to a constellation of relationships or associations: the divergent social networks to which people have access. The Vaturanga and their neighbours in rural Guadalcanal and their distant kin in town, illustrate these divergent social networks in such matters as economic change, ethnic relations, language and communication, and the mass media. Economic behaviours must be maintained by communication. This includes both the avenues of communication, and the meanings and symbols employed. This study especially focuses on the latter as a means to understand and comprehend the lives of the Vaturanga. Arts, Faculty of Anthropology, Department of Graduate 2009-09-25T21:46:54Z 2009-09-25T21:46:54Z 2001 2001-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/13159 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 17460653 bytes application/pdf
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language English
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description Studies of nation-states have tended to emphasize how they form a common national culture and the systems and institutions involved. This has included notions about the past, territory, language, and popular culture, among others. Many such studies hypothesize the role of media and publishing in establishing the modern nation-state as a sort of "imagined community" or a "creolized culture." This study, which looks at a local people called the Vaturanga, who live in northwestern Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands, approaches the subject from the point of view of economic and communicative behaviours. It is my contention that the dynamic events and features frequently seen in modern and especially post-colonial nation-states can best be explained by reference to a constellation of relationships or associations: the divergent social networks to which people have access. The Vaturanga and their neighbours in rural Guadalcanal and their distant kin in town, illustrate these divergent social networks in such matters as economic change, ethnic relations, language and communication, and the mass media. Economic behaviours must be maintained by communication. This includes both the avenues of communication, and the meanings and symbols employed. This study especially focuses on the latter as a means to understand and comprehend the lives of the Vaturanga. === Arts, Faculty of === Anthropology, Department of === Graduate
author Ryniker, David Craig
spellingShingle Ryniker, David Craig
A hard stone people : social relations and the nation state in the Vaturanga District, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands
author_facet Ryniker, David Craig
author_sort Ryniker, David Craig
title A hard stone people : social relations and the nation state in the Vaturanga District, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands
title_short A hard stone people : social relations and the nation state in the Vaturanga District, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands
title_full A hard stone people : social relations and the nation state in the Vaturanga District, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands
title_fullStr A hard stone people : social relations and the nation state in the Vaturanga District, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands
title_full_unstemmed A hard stone people : social relations and the nation state in the Vaturanga District, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands
title_sort hard stone people : social relations and the nation state in the vaturanga district, guadalcanal, solomon islands
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/13159
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