Mana, like culture, is a term that once inspired anthropological theory
but now lives an ambiguous half-life in scholarly discourse. The goal
of this book is to refocus attention on mana for three reasons. First is
the simple fact that many people in Oceania and elsewhere use the
term prominently in political, religious, and artistic projects as well as
everyday discourse. Although mainstream anthropological attention
to mana waned at the end of the twentieth century, discourse about
mana thrives in many Oceanic societies. It also circulates outside of
traditional Oceanic contexts—sometimes far outside, as in New Age
movements, fantasy fiction and online gaming. The second reason to
focus on mana anew is that it can offer scholars fresh insights about
relationships between aesthetics, ethics, and power and authority.
Third, a new focus on mana has the potential to generate new forms of
anthropological practice. By engaging collaboratively with Indigenous
communities on this specific topic, anthropologists, Indigenous and
otherwise, can actively take part in developing new understandings
of mana that have practical consequences—the production of new
mana, in effect. The authors of the following chapters examine mana
from multiple angles that converge on a single point: the contention
that thinking about mana at this historical moment is ethnographically
vital and theoretically promising in new ways.
Author(s): Matt Tomlinson, Ty P. Kāwika Tengan
Series: MONOGRAPHS IN ANTHROPOLOGY SERIES
Publisher: ANU Press
Year: 2016
Language: English
Pages: 391
List of Figures. vii
List of Tables . ix
Acknowledgements. xi
About the Cover Art. xiii
A Note on the Typesetting . xv
Introduction: Mana Anew. 1
Matt Tomlinson and Ty P. Kāwika Tengan
1. Mana Hawaiʻi: An Examination of Political Uses
of the Word Mana in Hawaiian. 37
Noenoe K. Silva
2. The Mana of Kū: Indigenous Nationhood, Masculinity
and Authority in Hawai‘i. 55
Ty P. Kāwika Tengan
3. Bodies Permeable and Divine: Tapu, Mana and the
Embodiment of Hegemony in Pre‑Christian Tonga. 77
Andy Mills
4. Niu Mana, Sport, Media and the Australian Diaspora . 107
Katerina Martina Teaiwa
5. Mana, Power and ‘Pawa’ in the Pacific and Beyond. 131
Alan Rumsey
6. Mana on the Move: Why Empirical Anchorage Trumps
Philosophical Drift. 155
Thorgeir Kolshus
7. ‘Press the Button, Mama!’ Mana and Christianity
on Makira, Solomon Islands. 183
Aram Oroi
8. The State of Mana, the Mana of the State . 203
Alexander Mawyer
9. Theologies of Mana and Sau in Fiji. 237
Matt Tomlinson and Sekove Bigitibau
10. Claiming Pule, Manifesting Mana: Ordinary Ethics
and Pentecostal Self-making in Samoa . 257
Jessica Hardin
11. Mana for a New Age. 285
Rachel Morgain
12. How Mana Left the Pacific and Became a Video Game
Mechanic. 309
Alex Golub and Jon Peterson
Afterword: Shape-Shifting Mana: Travels in Space and Time . 349
Niko Besnier and Margaret Jolly
Contributors. 369