This book is both an ethnohistory -- using written and oraccounts to uncover the circumstances surrounding the 1837 massacre of Ngatik's aboriginal population and its aftermath -- and a reevaluation of the concept of ethnicity, examining the cultural and sociopolitical factors shaping community identity.
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This book is both an ethnohistory -- using written and oraccounts to uncover the circumstances surrounding the 1837 massacre of Ngatik's aboriginal population and its aftermath -- and a reevaluation of the concept of ethnicity, examining the cultural and sociopolitical factors shaping community identity.
Read Less
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Seller's Description:
Fading. Good-Bumped and creased book with tears to the extremities, but not affecting the text block, may have remainder mark or previous owner's name-GOOD Standard-sized.
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Seller's Description:
Very Good. 8vo. xiii, 298pp, index, bibliography, notes. Or card covers. Front cover creased, some light edge wear to covers. In 1837 the trading cutter, Lambton, attacked the Micronesian island of Sapwuahfik. After killing all the men and stealing the island's valuable hoard of tortoiseshell the Lambtom set sail leaving behind a much different society-one of survivors and murderers-who would eventually poduce a new population and culture. The story of Ngatik had begun. Both a work of ethnohistory using oral traditions and written documents, and a reevaluation of the concept of ethnicity examining the cultural and sociopolitical factors shaping community identity.