Moro and the Weather Coast : a revitalization movement in the Solomon Islands /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Çoker, Gülbün, author.
Imprint:Durham, North Carolina : Carolina Academic Press, [2022]
©2022
Description:xxi, 230 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm.
Language:English
Series:Ritual Studies Monograph Series
Carolina Academic Press ritual studies monographs.
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12772995
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9781531022419
1531022413
9781531022426
1531022421
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (pages 223-224) and index.
Summary:"A political movement known to its own adherents as "Moro Movement," "Moro Company," or "Kastom Company" started on the southern coast of Guadalcanal, the largest island in the Solomon Islands of the southwest Pacific, around 1957. It came on the heels of another movement known in the anthropological literature as "Marching Rule" or "Maasina Rule" or "Maasina Ruru" that was based on the island of Malaita, which is about a hundred kilometers northeast of Guadalcanal. The fieldwork lasted twelve months, from November 1965 through October 1966, at a time when the Movement had somewhat revitalized following a hiatus of some years. For most of the year, the author lived in the Movement's headquarters, the village of Makaruka, with side trips to other settlements. This study is primarily a record of one specific political movement. It does not analyze the data in terms of a particular theoretical framework; it is a sociological and historical description of one area's reaction to a changed way of life brought about by the dominance of Europeans"--
Description
Summary:

The Moro Movement started in 1957 along the southeastern coast of Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands group. In 1965-1966, the author spent a year as an anthropologist, observing the Moro adherents' efforts to revitalize their lives and create an economy based on money.

The Islanders contact with Europeans dated back to the nineteenth century when missions arrived and a protectorate was established by the British. Mission teachings and Protectorate laws were alien to the Islanders. In particular, they were compelled to abandon traditional ways of coping with their environment and the supernatural beings who had to be appeased and negotiated through ritual activities. The Islanders resented their losses and the authorities who had intruded into their lives. Moro's vision of a new world tried to bring back the "lost ways," along with a claim of ownership of Guadalcanal. These changes were in part modeled on European culture of which the Islanders had limited knowledge.

Throughout the year, the author witnessed their hard work and their sadness and confusion caused by their inability to bring about the changes they yearned for, all of which is chronicled in Moro and the Weather Coast.

"Although Moro passed away in 2006 and will never read O'Connor's book, its publication may finally make her research more available not only to students of Oceania but also to the Weather Coast people of Guadalcanal." -- Journal of Anthropological Research


Physical Description:xxi, 230 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references (pages 223-224) and index.
ISBN:9781531022419
1531022413
9781531022426
1531022421