Bridging Mental Boundaries in a Postcolonial Microcosm: Identity and Development in Vanuatu,Used

Bridging Mental Boundaries in a Postcolonial Microcosm: Identity and Development in Vanuatu,Used

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SKU: SONG0824820487
Brand: University of Hawaii Press
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The South Pacific archipelago of Vanuatu simultaneously experienced the two major types of colonialism of the modern era (British and French), the only instance in which these colonial powers jointly ruled the same people in the same territory over an extended period of time. This, in addition to its small size and recent independence (1980), makes Vanuatu an ideal case study of the clash of contemporary colonialism and its enduring legacies. At the same time, the uniqueness of Melanesian society highlights the singular role of indigenous culture in shaping both colonial and postcolonial political reality. With its close attention to global processes, Bridging Mental Boundaries in a Postcolonial Microcosm provides a fresh comparative approach to an island state that has most frequently been examined from an ethnographic or area studies perspective.William F. S. Miles looks at the longterm effects of the joint FrancoBritish administration in public policy, political disputes, and social cleavages in postindependence Vanuatu. He emphasizes the strong imprint left by "condocolonialism" in dividing niVanuatu into "Anglophones" and "Francophones," but also suggest how this basic division is being replaced (or overlaid) by divisions based on urban or rural residence, "traditional" or "modern" employment, and disparities between the status and activities of men and women. As such, this volume is more than an analysis of a unique case of colonialism and its effects; it is an interpretation of the evolution of an insular society beset by particularly convoluted precolonial, colonial, and postcolonial fractures. Based principally on research conducted in 1991 and, following a key change in Vanuatu's government, a subsequent visit in 1992, the analysis is enriched by regular comparisons between Vanuatu and other colonized societies where the author has carried out original research, including Niger, Nigeria, Martinique, and Pondicherry. Extensive interviews with niVanuatu are integrated throughout the text, presenting islanders' views of their own experience.

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