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39 - Rethinking Gender and Identity in Asia and the Pacific

from Part VIII - Approaches, Sources, and Subaltern Histories of the Modern Pacific

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2022

Anne Perez Hattori
Affiliation:
University of Guam
Jane Samson
Affiliation:
University of Alberta
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Summary

Since the 1980s, a focus on gender relations has opened up new questions about the Pacific past across a diverse set of issues.1 Health, sexuality, war, the family, reproduction, and many other areas have benefited from the analytical insights made possible by gender as a ‘category of analysis’.2 Gender, as Patricia O’Brien has argued, has been ‘vital to understanding the cultural kaleidoscope of the Pacific’.3 For instance, recognition that gender is a socially constructed category and system of meaning has produced an influential body of scholarship on Western representations of Pacific bodies since the eighteenth century across a range of cultural texts.4 Because gender is woven into the structure of institutions, the allocation of resources, and the sexual division of labour, it has been a particularly fruitful area for the examinations of power and rank in Indigenous societies, while studies of cross-cultural encounters have highlighted the centrality of gender and sexuality to imperial and colonial projects.5

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023

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