Reclaiming Native Hawaiian Knowledge Represented in Bird Taxonomies

IF 0.7 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Ethnobiology Letters Pub Date : 2020-12-04 DOI:10.14237/ebl.11.2.2020.1682
Noah Gomes
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

This paper examines three examples of native bird classification systems historically used by the aboriginal peoples of the Hawaiian Islands. The goal is to better understand Indigenous linguistic hierarchies in the taxonomic structure and nomenclature systems that were formerly utilized by these colonized peoples. Three specific manuscripts from two native historians and a foreign naturalist are analyzed to better ascertain how these systems may have worked, despite the dearth of data on the comprehensive knowledge of bird hunters and ritual specialists. The utilitarian basis of these systems is shown to have potential practical application for the ongoing cultural and linguistic revitalization of the native Hawaiian people. The perspectives and reasoning behind these systems could be used as a tool for reviving traditional relationships with the unique ecosystems of Hawaiʻi. Further research in the large but diffuse archives of Hawaiian language manuscripts may eventually expand our understanding of Hawaiian folk systematics. Received February 29, 2020 OPEN ACCESS Accepted June 22, 2020 DOI 10.14237/ebl.11.2.2020.1682 Published December 4, 2020
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以鸟类分类学为代表的夏威夷原住民知识的再生
本文考察了夏威夷群岛原住民历史上使用的三个本土鸟类分类系统的例子。目标是更好地理解这些被殖民民族以前使用的分类结构和命名系统中的土著语言等级。对两位本土历史学家和一位外国博物学家的三份具体手稿进行了分析,以更好地确定这些系统是如何运作的,尽管缺乏鸟类猎人和仪式专家的全面知识数据。这些制度的功利基础被证明对夏威夷原住民正在进行的文化和语言复兴具有潜在的实际应用。这些系统背后的观点和推理可以作为恢复与夏威夷独特生态系统传统关系的工具。对大量但分散的夏威夷语手稿档案的进一步研究可能最终扩大我们对夏威夷民间系统学的理解。接收日期:2020年2月29日开放访问接受日期:2020 2020年6月22日DOI 10.14237/bl.11.2.2020.1682发布时间:2020年12月4日
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来源期刊
Ethnobiology Letters
Ethnobiology Letters ANTHROPOLOGY-
自引率
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发文量
10
审稿时长
16 weeks
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