When Women Ruled the Pacific - (Studies in Pacific Worlds) by Joy Schulz (Hardcover)
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About this item
Highlights
- Throughout the nineteenth century British and American imperialists advanced into the Pacific, with catastrophic effects for Polynesian peoples and cultures.
- About the Author: Joy Schulz is a history and political science instructor at Metropolitan Community College in Omaha.
- 166 Pages
- History, United States
- Series Name: Studies in Pacific Worlds
Description
About the Book
Joy Schulz explores Polynesia's nineteenth-century women rulers, who held enormous domestic and foreign power and expertly governed their people amid shifting loyalties, outright betrayals, and the ascendancy of imperial racism.Book Synopsis
Throughout the nineteenth century British and American imperialists advanced into the Pacific, with catastrophic effects for Polynesian peoples and cultures. In both Tahiti and Hawai'i, women rulers attempted to mitigate the effects of these encounters, utilizing their power amid the destabilizing influence of the English and Americans. However, as the century progressed, foreign diseases devastated the Tahitian and Hawaiian populations, and powerful European militaries jockeyed for more formal imperial control over Polynesian waystations, causing Tahiti to cede rule to France in 1847 and Hawai'i to relinquish power to the United States in 1893. In When Women Ruled the Pacific Joy Schulz highlights four Polynesian women rulers who held enormous domestic and foreign power and expertly governed their people amid shifting loyalties, outright betrayals, and the ascendancy of imperial racism. Like their European counterparts, these Polynesian rulers fought arguments of lineage, as well as battles for territorial control, yet the freedom of Polynesian women in general and women rulers in particular was unlike anything Europeans and Americans had ever seen. Consequently, white chroniclers of contact had difficulty explaining their encounters, initially praising yet ultimately condemning Polynesian gender systems, resulting in the loss of women's autonomy. The queens' successes have been lost in the archives as imperial histories and missionary accounts chose to tell different stories. In this first book to consider queenship and women's political sovereignty in the Pacific, Schulz recenters the lives of the women rulers in the history of nineteenth-century international relations.Review Quotes
"When Women Ruled the Pacific provides a compact, well-written exploration into how gendered Indigenous power produced complicated histories of sovereignty and colonialism in these two Pacific nations."--Carol MacLennan, American Historical Review
"Audiences from a wide range of backgrounds looking to study topics including but not limited to women, gender, and sexuality, Indigenous politics, oceanic history, nineteenth-century history, and nineteenth-century politics will gain insights from, change, and/or re-center their views from this amazing book."--Daniel Kauwila Mahi, Pacific Historical Review
"This is a readable, concise, and nicely illustrated book."--L. Lindstrom, Choice-- (8/1/2024 12:00:00 AM)
"A smartly written text that makes wide-ranging use of a robust set of primary archives. Joy Schulz's impressive command of the vast and varied primary sources for the figures she examines is evident throughout the text. More, Schulz's multidisciplinary approach informs and permeates her study."--Jennifer Thigpen, author of Island Queens and Mission Wives: How Gender and Empire Remade Hawai'i's Pacific World
"Compelling, deeply researched, and beautifully written. When Women Ruled the Pacific addresses an area of history that has been underserved by existing literature. Joy Schulz has found a really intriguing historical situation with the case of the four queens and has written an excellent book."--Emily Manktelow, author of Gender, Power, and Sexual Abuse in the Pacific: Rev. Simpson's "Improper Liberties"
About the Author
Joy Schulz is a history and political science instructor at Metropolitan Community College in Omaha. She is the author of Hawaiian by Birth: Missionary Children, Bicultural Identity, and U.S. Colonialism in the Pacific (Nebraska, 2017).Dimensions (Overall): 9.6 Inches (H) x 6.35 Inches (W) x .7 Inches (D)
Weight: .8 Pounds
Suggested Age: 22 Years and Up
Series Title: Studies in Pacific Worlds
Sub-Genre: United States
Genre: History
Number of Pages: 166
Publisher: University of Nebraska Press
Theme: State & Local, West (AK, CA, CO, HI, ID, MT, NV, UT, WY)
Format: Hardcover
Author: Joy Schulz
Language: English
Street Date: August 1, 2023
TCIN: 89305376
UPC: 9781496231802
Item Number (DPCI): 247-21-2275
Origin: Made in the USA or Imported
Shipping details
Estimated ship dimensions: 0.7 inches length x 6.35 inches width x 9.6 inches height
Estimated ship weight: 0.8 pounds
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