A Chosen People, a Promised Land: Mormonism and Race in Hawai'i

A Chosen People, a Promised Land: Mormonism and Race in Hawai'i

by Hokulani K. Aikau
A Chosen People, a Promised Land: Mormonism and Race in Hawai'i

A Chosen People, a Promised Land: Mormonism and Race in Hawai'i

by Hokulani K. Aikau

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Overview

Christianity figured prominently in the imperial and colonial exploitation and dispossession of indigenous peoples worldwide, yet many indigenous people embrace Christian faith as part of their cultural and ethnic identities. A Chosen People, a Promised Land gets to the heart of this contradiction by exploring how Native Hawaiian members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (more commonly known as Mormons) understand and negotiate their place in this quintessentially American religion.

Mormon missionaries arrived in Hawai‘i in 1850, a mere twenty years after Joseph Smith founded the church. Hokulani K. Aikau traces how Native Hawaiians became integrated into the religious doctrine of the church as a “chosen people”—even at a time when exclusionary racial policies regarding black members of the church were being codified. Aikau shows how Hawaiians and other Polynesian saints came to be considered chosen and how they were able to use their venerated status toward their own spiritual, cultural, and pragmatic ends.

Using the words of Native Hawaiian Latter-Day Saints to illuminate the intersections of race, colonization, and religion, A Chosen People, a Promised Land examines Polynesian Mormon articulations of faith and identity within a larger political context of self-determination.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780816674626
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Publication date: 01/18/2012
Series: First Peoples: New Directions in Indigenous Studies
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.30(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Hokulani K. Aikau is associate professor of indigenous and Native Hawaiian politics at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa. She is coeditor of Feminist Waves, Feminist Generations: Life Stories from the Academy (Minnesota, 2007).

Table of Contents

Contents

Preface

Introduction: Negotiating Faithfulness

1. Mormonism, Race, and Lineage: The Making of a Chosen People

2. Lā‘ie, a Promised Land, and Pu’uhonua: Spatial Struggles for Land and Identity

3. Called to Serve: Labor Missionary Work and Modernity

4. In the Service of the Lord: Religion, Race, and the Polynesian Cultural Center

5. Voyages of Faith: Contemporary Kanaka Maoli Struggles for Sustainable Self-Determination

Conclusion: Holo Mua, Moving Forward

Acknowledgments
Notes
Glossary
Bibliography
Index

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