Foreign Objects in Colonial-Era Hawaiian Sites: Change and Continuity in Nineteenth-Century Nu‘alolo Kai, Kaua‘i Island

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15286/jps.129.2.193-236

Keywords:

colonial-era Hawai‘i, Nu‘alolo Kai, historical archaeology, post-contact period, legacy collections, “fatal impact”

Abstract

Archaeologists in Hawaiʻi, and Polynesia generally, have often struggled to exploit the interpretive potential of foreign artefacts in indigenous settings. This paper considers a consequential foreign artefact assemblage from Nuʻalolo Kai, a remote area on the Nā Pali Coast of Kaua‘i Island, Hawaiʻi. This archaeological assemblage derives from deeply stratified, well-preserved deposits that were excavated by Bishop Museum staff between 1958 and 1964. While these excavations were aimed at identifying early settlement sites on Kauaʻi, numerous foreign artefacts dating from the nineteenth century were also encountered. This article considers how these foreign materials can be used to refine the chronology of site use in the post-contact period and to gain a more robust picture of the Nuʻalolo Kai community during this important period of socioeconomic change. The analysis demonstrates that the boundary between pre-contact and “post-contact” lifeways, as represented in archaeological sites in Hawaiʻi and elsewhere in Polynesia, may be blurred. Moreover, the arrival of foreign goods did not have an immediate and “fatal impact” on traditional Hawaiian ways of life but instead denote cultural continuity, innovation and change. Finally, it is argued that trajectories of change in the household assemblages of rural nineteenth-century Hawaiʻi may have varied considerably from those seen in more connected areas of the archipelago.

Author Biography

Summer Moore, William & Mary

Summer Moore recently completed her PhD in Anthropology at William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia (USA). She currently is a project archaeologist at the International Archaeological Research Institute, Inc., in Honolulu. Her doctoral research, which was supported by a National Science Foundation Dissertation Improvement Grant, examined cultural continuity and change at post-contact Hawaiian house sites on the Nā Pali Coast of Kauaʻi Island, Hawaiian Islands. Her research focuses on household economies and social transformation in the past, particularly during Hawaiʻi’s post-contact period. Recent publications have appeared in the Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology and the Journal of Pacific Archaeology.

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Published

2020-06-29

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Articles