Titolo completo
Pacific Geographies
Editore
Association of Pacific Studies
ISSN
2196-1468 (Rivista Stampata)
2199-9104 (Rivista Online)
Numero del fascicolo
58
Data del fascicolo
2022
Titolo completo
Invisible belongings: Carolinian practices of personhood and space as moral principles
Di (autore)
Affiliazione
University of Regina, Department of Anthropology, 3737 Wascana Parkway, Regina, Saskatchewan S4S 0A2, Associate Professor
Numero di Pagine
7
Prima Pagina
28
Ultima Pagina
34
Lingua del testo
Inglese
Data di publicazione
2022
Descrizione principale
Based on field research and published sources, this paper examines Micronesian migration in regards to principles of order and values on their home atolls. For Carolinians, place names and personal names are part of the web of intangible knowledge that can serve to assure certain positions and rights. They unfold the untold facts of gender and hierarchy and can be used as a peephole into social practice. Names and places represent stability and continuity in an otherwise fluid world. Migrants, I argue, can use such shared experiences of their “invisible belongings” to re-create some sense of home and build a community based on versions of these principles and values.