Titolo completo
Pacific Geographies
Titolo abbreviato
PG
Editore
Association of Pacific Studies
ISSN
2199-9104 (Rivista Online)
10.23791/0 (Rivista Online)
Numero del fascicolo
55
Data del fascicolo
2021
Titolo completo
Identities of Indigenous and missionary cultures in German New Guinea
Sottotitolo
Cultural changes through medical work carried out by the Neuendettelsau Missionary Society
Di (autore)
Affiliazione
Institute of the History of Medicine and Medical Ethics, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
Numero di Pagine
9
Prima Pagina
11
Ultima Pagina
19
Lingua del testo
Inglese
Data di publicazione
2021
Descrizione principale
The German colonial period in Papua New Guinea (1884-1919) involved profound changes in culture and identity – for Indigenous peoples as well as for missionaries and administrators. In 1886, the first Lutheran missionaries from the Neuendettelsau Missionary Society arrived at Finschhafen in Kaiser-Wilhelmsland, initiating many first contacts between Indigenous communities and European medicine as missionary societies played an important role in establishing medical facilities. This article explores similarities between traditional Indigenous spirituality and missionary beliefs in a medical context. In both cultures, medical topics like illness and healing were linked to metaphysical ideologies, which provide the basis of my contention that medical work could interfere with, and transform Indigenous beliefs and identities. However, for the purpose of evangelisation, the missionaries also adapted their theology and spiritual conceptions of illness to Indigenous spirituality. The use of medical care for missionary purposes is a good example of how changes of culture and identity interacted and were accommodated by both parties. I explore whether the two cultural identities evolved and changed to meet each other.