Kenneth Emory
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Kenneth Emory (1898 in Honolulu, Hawaii - 1985) was an archaeologist, focusing in pre-Christian Polynesian culture.
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[edit] Biography
While a high school student, several archaeological digs in the Honolulu area piqued Emory's interest in Polynesian artifacts and culture. Prosyletization in the first half of the nineteenth century by Roman Catholic, Protestant, and Mormon missionaries was so successful that by the 1920s Polynesians had abandoned their ancestral gods in all but a few isolated places. When Emory realized this he dedicated his life to finding and documenting as much pre-Christian Polynesian culture as he could. After attending Dartmouth College, he became associated with the Bishop Museum and spent the next 60 years roaming the Pacific, seeking out Polynesian settlement sites, excavating relics, and photographing petroglyphs. He also sought out Polynesians, who remembered the pre-Christian chants and rituals, and recorded them on film. By the 1950s he was the world's foremost expert on Polynesian culture.
Emory theorized that Polynesians were descended from the Maoris of New Zealand, and that Polynesian culture originated on Tonga and Samoa and migrated eastward through the Pacific to Tahiti, the Marquesas, and Hawaii. Emory believed, but did not attempt to prove, that Polynesians were capable of sailing great distances to all points of the compass. He argued that when the population of an island exceeded its capacity, a king or noble would outift a large oceangoing vessel and set off to verify rumors of other habitable islands, sending back word of his discovery. Emory believed the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii) were colonized by Society Islanders (Tahitians) in this way. With Kon-Tiki, Thor Heyerdahl proved that ancient mariners could have sailed westward across the Pacific; Emory replied that Peruvians might have gotten as far west as Easter Island, but its culture was overwhelmingly Polynesian. Others argued that even if Tahitians found a new land mass such as Hawaii, they would be unable to return to their point of origin. Emory disagreed, pointing out that contemporary copra schooners relied on wave direction, ocean currents, and seabirds to guide them to land, and Polynesian legends made frequent reference to celestial navigation. Besides: "....If they sailed south they were bound to hit islands whose inhabitants would know where the Society Islands lay...."[1]
Emory's parents were from Massachusetts. By the time of his birth, Honolulu offered every amenity that could be found in any American city, and regular steamship service connected the city with San Francisco and other Pacific ports. [2] Hawaiians accepted the inevitable presence of haole (Anglos) on their islands, partly because "....It is now much easier for (Hawaiians) to live....than in the old strenuous days when famine and war were never far off." [3] In Hawaii intermarriage was relatively rare, but in Taiti intermarriage between French and Tahitians was quite common. Emory married a woman whose mother's family was Tahitian and whose father's was French. She considered Paris her second home. [4]
In 1947 Emory spent time on Kapingamarangi, a remote Micronesian atoll, which, from his description, approached Rousseau's ideal society: "This tradiational lifestyle supported five hundred people on land ...that did not total more than six-tenths of a sqaure mile. There was no crime....The people...were courteous, hospitable, hard-working,...and superbly adjusted to their environment.[5]
[edit] Selected bibliography
- Emory, Kenneth P. (1943) "Polynesian stone remains." In Studies in the Anthropology of Oceania and Asia, presented in memory of Roland Burrage Dixon, edited by James M. Andrews. Cambridge, Mass., The Museum.
- Emory, Kenneth Pike, and Yosihiko H Sinoto. (1961) Oahu excavations. [Honolulu]: Bishop Museum Press.
- Emory, Kenneth Pike. (1965) Kapingamarangi, social and religious life of a Polynesian atoll. Honolulu, The Museum.
- Emory, Kenneth Pike. (1969) The island of Lanai : a survey of native culture. Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press Reprints.
- Emory, Kenneth Pike, and Honor Maude. (1979). String Figures of the Tuamotus. Canberra: Homa Press. ISBN 0959611118
- Emory, Kenneth Pike. (2002) Archaeology of Nihoa and Necker Islands. Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press, Mutual Publishers. ISBN 1566475651
[edit] Footnotes
[edit] References
- Krauss, Bob. (1988) Keneti: The South Seas Adventures of Kenneth Emory. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0824811534
[edit] External links
- Dening, Greg. "Beautiful Day. Got Married. Learned Canoe Lashings." New York Times, March 5, 1989.