Road Belong Cargo: A Study of the Crago Movement in the Southern Madang District New Guinea

used

Author(s): Peter Lawrence

Pacific Islands | Secondhand

Secondhand. First edition.


The 1940s and 1950s were marked by an efflorescence of Melanesian cargo cult activities--periodic movements in which native people deeply believed they could attain abundant European goods (and the status that these goods seemed to assure) by ritual means. Road Belong Cargo has long been the authoritative account of the cargo phenomenon in New Guinea. Written from Lawrence's own careful research, as well as from historical records and comparable studies in anthropology and ethnohistory, this theoretically sophisticated study describes how the villagers of the Madang District sought, through religious experiment and speculation, to change a world in which they felt themselves to be the underdogs despised by the colonial masters. An excellent history of culture contact and ethnic relations over nearly eight decades, this study of people living in a tiny segment of the frontier between the industrial world and that of the village, in a long isolated corner of the world, enables readers to see five short-lived religious movements, aggravated by the rigid rule imposed by a succession of Western administrations.


Contents: The native cosmic order -- The colonial order, 1871-1950 -- From paganism to Christianity: the first three cargo beliefs, 1871-1933 -- The fourth cargo belief, 1933-45 -- The new phase: Yali's rise to power, 1945-6 -- The Rai coast rehabilitation scheme, 1945-7 -- Yali in Port Moresby: the point of no return, August-December 1947 -- The fifth cargo belief, 1948-50 -- The cargo movement: motivation, means, and effects. 

Ex-library.


Product Information

General Fields

  • : 2471712795320
  • : Melbourn University press
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Peter Lawrence
  • : Hardback
  • : very good
  • : 293
  • : Black and white illustrations