The Politics of Incorporation: Masculinity, Spatiality and Modernity among the Ngaing of Papua New Guinea

2002 | journal article; research paper

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​The Politics of Incorporation: Masculinity, Spatiality and Modernity among the Ngaing of Papua New Guinea​
Kempf, W. ​ (2002) 
Oceania73(1) pp. 56​-77​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.2307/40331871 

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Authors
Kempf, Wolfgang 
Abstract
In this paper I argue that the way in which masculinity and spatiality are reconstituted among the Ngaing men of Madang Province (Papua New Guinea) is pivotally implicated in how they articulate their ongoing claim to incorporation in modernity. The manner in which they strive for progress is indicative of identifications coupling Christianity and whiteness with the hope of redemption from a condition of blackness, inferiority and marginality, With the help of recent discourses and secret ritual practices, in which Christian components combine with local cultural patterns, the men make clear that indigenous participation in modernity is prefigured on the inside of external manifestations of body and space. This discursive and ritual empowerment of the men rests on a culturally specific construction of the inside and the outside in which the knowledge, power and mobility possessed by whites are construed as an integral part of the local world.
Issue Date
2002
Journal
Oceania 
ISSN
0029-8077
ISSN
0029-8077
Language
English

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