In the 19th century Melanesians were pejoratively labelled black by European maritime explorers (mela = black; nesia = islands).1 Emerging scholarship on the Black Pacific (Shilliam 2015; Solis 2015a, 2015b; Swan [as interviewed by Blain 2016]), a parallel to Paul Gilroy’s The Black Atlantic (1993), focuses on historical and contemporary identifications and articulations (“affinities, affiliations and collaborations” [Solis 2015b: 358]) between Oceanian and African diasporic peoples, cultures and politics based upon shared Otherness to colonial occupiers.2 The essay that follows contributes to this work by presenting a perspective from Melanesia. It attempts to demonstrate that over time, encounters with Atlantic-based notions of Black Powe...
Melanesia, home to some 7 million people, covers a vast geographic region of the Southwest Pacific, ...
This chapter provides a narrative history in three phases – colonial rule, the Pacific War and decol...
In Australia, the 1960s saw a broadening of music offerings from other cultures in school materials ...
In the 19th century Melanesians were pejoratively labelled black by European maritime explorers (mel...
The Author(s) 2019. Melanesians were pejoratively labelled the dark-skinned islanders by European ex...
Australian South Sea Islanders, the descendants of the Melanesians from (primarily) Vanuatu and Solo...
Australian South Sea Islanders, the descendants of the Melanesians from (primarily) Vanuatu and Solo...
This article identifies and explores an emerging tendency among Melanesians to reenvision their regi...
In this essay, I examine the dominant representations of Melanesia as a place and Melanesians as peo...
This article identifies and explores an emerging tendency among Melanesians to reenvision their regi...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available ...
Taking a historical ethnomusicological approach, this article argues that shipboard and plantation m...
The term Melanesia is a partly geographic, partly cultural referent to a subregion of the island Pac...
This article identifies and explores an emerging tendency among Melanesians to reenvision their regi...
Taking a historical ethnomusicological approach, this article argues that shipboard and plantation m...
Melanesia, home to some 7 million people, covers a vast geographic region of the Southwest Pacific, ...
This chapter provides a narrative history in three phases – colonial rule, the Pacific War and decol...
In Australia, the 1960s saw a broadening of music offerings from other cultures in school materials ...
In the 19th century Melanesians were pejoratively labelled black by European maritime explorers (mel...
The Author(s) 2019. Melanesians were pejoratively labelled the dark-skinned islanders by European ex...
Australian South Sea Islanders, the descendants of the Melanesians from (primarily) Vanuatu and Solo...
Australian South Sea Islanders, the descendants of the Melanesians from (primarily) Vanuatu and Solo...
This article identifies and explores an emerging tendency among Melanesians to reenvision their regi...
In this essay, I examine the dominant representations of Melanesia as a place and Melanesians as peo...
This article identifies and explores an emerging tendency among Melanesians to reenvision their regi...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available ...
Taking a historical ethnomusicological approach, this article argues that shipboard and plantation m...
The term Melanesia is a partly geographic, partly cultural referent to a subregion of the island Pac...
This article identifies and explores an emerging tendency among Melanesians to reenvision their regi...
Taking a historical ethnomusicological approach, this article argues that shipboard and plantation m...
Melanesia, home to some 7 million people, covers a vast geographic region of the Southwest Pacific, ...
This chapter provides a narrative history in three phases – colonial rule, the Pacific War and decol...
In Australia, the 1960s saw a broadening of music offerings from other cultures in school materials ...