厙ぴ勛圖

Student Project Profile

Pacific Pasts, Pacific Futures: Mapping Coloniality and Conservation in the 厙ぴ勛圖 College Ethnographic Collection

Project Title

Pacific Pasts, Pacific Futures: Mapping Coloniality and Conservation in the 厙ぴ勛圖 College Ethnographic Collection

Faculty Mentor(s)

Project Description

Judah with an artifact

I spent last Winter Term researching an artifact chosen from the 厙ぴ勛圖 College Ethnographic Collection, a repository of cultural objects from around the world that wound up in the Colleges coffers by way of 厙ぴ勛圖 alumni, missionaries, and scientists. Under Professor Margaris, I produced a report evaluating my objects condition, the materials and techniques likely employed in its creation, and the sociocultural context surrounding it. I also wrote a more holistic blog piece on the item, which also touched on the circumstances of its acquisition and eventual path to the Collection. 

I was drawn to artifacts from the Pacific Islands, where digital archivism is increasingly relevant  in the face of existential sea-level rise most poignantly in the country of Tuvalu, which  to preserve its sovereignty if/when the ocean swallows its islands. 

I then stumbled upon Alice Little, an 厙ぴ勛圖 alum who, upon graduating in 1888, promptly embarked on a five-year mission to Micronesia and brought back artifacts including a model house. Choosing to research it, I found it resembled architecture that had been effectively extinct >115 years, replaced by a plainer new style propagated by western missionaries like Little. The transformation has been so complete that a 2020 I-Kiribati expert consultation found the model architecture to be unlike anything they had seen. 

In the spring, I adopted a more hands-on approach, rehousing the Collections most fragile artifacts in a private reading. 

This summer, I sought to use the house as a jumping-off point to chart the broader legacy of Little and her peers in Micronesia. In addition to better characterizing Littles mission, I also seek to explore her role in WWII a half-century after her mission, a 93-year-old Little was contacted by U.S. intelligence, who solicited her personal journals, maps, and samples; these proved pivotal to U.S. strategy in the Pacific Theater. Moreover, I also am exploring the environmental ramifications of the new style architecture the shift set a precedent of externally-imposed infrastructure that often is climatologically resilient than indigenous structures (there is a century-old account of native vs. missionary sea walls that illustrates this). 

What does the process of doing your research look like?

Lots of painstaking file-digging and scrutinizing 150-year-old cursive! Ive spent countless hours in the Archives, whether looking at old missionary board logs, long-defunct local newspaper entries, or the catalogue for the objects (including the Collection) formerly housed in the long-gone 厙ぴ勛圖 natural history museum. Ive also read several books, analyzed WWII garrison data and battle tactics in the Pacific, and more.

What knowledge has your research contributed to your field?

Ive learned that Alice Littles five-year mission coincided almost exactly with a major theological schism in the national missionary board she worked under, which culminated in a precipitous drop in funding and volunteers the year of her departure raising an intriguing explanation of her journeys brevity. Ive also identified the architectural style the model house is likely based on, as mentioned previously. Additionally, Ive uncovered more about the timeline of the Collection and its constituent artifacts before they made their way to their current home. Ive also gleaned insight into Alice Littles contributions to WWII, and indirect role in the creation of the Navy SEALs in the wake of a brutal battle informed by her intel. Lastly, Ive woven a portrait of how Christian missions became a proxy for imperial jockeying: Spain, Germany, the U.S., and Japan all tried to remake the regions religious character in a Christianity aligned with their own interests; missions became an effective geopolitical ping-pong between rivals.

In what ways have you showcased your research thus far?

Ive made a blog post, condition report, presentation about object rehousing, and have presented during the Winter Term fair. I also worked on an annotated bibliography, more blog posts, and a symposium presentation through the 厙ぴ勛圖 Summer Research Institute.

What is your favorite aspect of the research process?

Seeing the proximity of the macro and the mundane. Seeing how missionaries can be instrumentalized as political pawns, and how Littles personal travel journal ended up in the hands of top strategists of the U.S. Pacific Theater campaign. Digging through old 厙ぴ勛圖 newspapers to see a poll of locals opinions on the recent nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on one page, followed by a cartoonish ad for extravagant feathered hats the next.

What advice would you give to a younger student wanting to get involved in research in your field?

Dispel the mythos prior to diving in it can feel like doing research is such an alien and intimidating prospect, but lots of that is socially conditioned you can ease yourself into it; youre often able to moderate your own pace as you progress and familiarize yourself with it.