Melanesia

dc.contributor.authorBedford, Stuart
dc.contributor.editorColin Renfrew
dc.contributor.editorPaul G. Bahn
dc.date.accessioned2015-12-10T22:54:58Z
dc.date.issued2014
dc.date.updated2020-11-22T07:37:20Z
dc.description.abstractMelanesia, home to some 7 million people, covers a vast geographic region of the Southwest Pacific, comprising more than ten thousand islands, ranging from New Guinea, the world�s second largest at some 785,753 km2, to a myriad of high volcanic islands through to small low atolls, stretching for thousands of kilometres across the Pacific Ocean (Map 1.39.1). It is an extraordinarily diverse place biogeographically, as on many other levels, and no more diverse than the people who inhabit the region. If there is an overarching theme that sums up the region�s people, it has to be diversity: their languages, cultures, sociopolitical structures, phenotype and even their very deep pasts, fragments of which are found in the archaeological record. As eloquently described by Walter and Sheppard (2006: 137), it is a region �inhabited by a mosaic of culturally and linguistically diverse peoples with various historical relationships and complex patterns of social and political interaction�. How then did we arrive with such an all-encompassing, entrenched and familiar label for a region of such diversity? For such seemingly arbitrary labelling, credit goes to the French explorer Dumont d�Urville and his carving up of the Pacific in 1832 into Melanesia, Micronesia and Polynesia. Heavily influenced by the ideas of earlier European explorers of the Pacific and the contemporary concepts of racial categorisation, his divisions were founded on many perceived and some real geocultural boundaries (Clark 2003). But while the literal translation of the popularised category �Melanesia� simply meant the �black islands�, it carried with it a host of negative connotations, including the idea that the peoples of the region were generally physically and culturally inferior and particularly so when compared with Polynesians.
dc.identifier.isbn9780521119931
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1885/59889
dc.publisherCambridge University Press
dc.relation.ispartofThe Cambridge World Prehistory Volume 1: Africa, South and Southeast Asia and the Pacific
dc.relation.isversionof1st Edition
dc.titleMelanesia
dc.typeBook chapter
local.bibliographicCitation.lastpage631
local.bibliographicCitation.placeofpublicationNew York
local.bibliographicCitation.startpage622
local.contributor.affiliationBedford, Stuart, College of Asia and the Pacific, ANU
local.contributor.authoruidBedford, Stuart, u3859218
local.description.embargo2037-12-31
local.description.notesImported from ARIES
local.identifier.absfor210106 - Archaeology of New Guinea and Pacific Islands (excl. New Zealand)
local.identifier.ariespublicationu4455832xPUB512
local.identifier.doi.1017/CHO9781139017831.043
local.type.statusPublished Version

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