Whakapapa in anthropological research on tuberculosis in the Pacific

Authors

  • Julie Park
  • Judith Littleton

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11157/sites-vol8iss2id180

Keywords:

transnational health, Tuvalu, whakapapa, New Zealand, syndemics

Abstract

As a theory of knowledge encompassing ecological and cosmological frameworks, Maori whakapapa of non-human species bring a diverse array of emergent entities into kinship relations over time and space. Whakapapa narratives explain the coming into being of those relationships and their moral foundations in utu (reciprocity). In this paper, the authors demonstrate that the ‘mind map’ (Roberts 2010) of whakapapa can provide a coordinating framework for social theories of complexity used in medical anthropology. A whakapapa approach also responds effectively to the challenge posed by Gillett (2009:98): ‘How exactly should we position indigenous knowledges in a discussion of policy in post-colonial society? We conclude that the principle of utu provides both a workable local social theory and a moral framework that can be used to assess policies which shape peoples’ lives, in this case, the lives of Tuvaluans who are contending with tuberculosis in our shared transnational space.

Author Biographies

Julie Park

Associate Professor Julie Park is a social anthropologist in the Department of Anthropology, The University of Auckland. She has research interests in New Zealand society, Polynesia, and health and illness. In addition to her work with the Transnational Pacific Health project she is in the final stages of a book based on long term research with people with haemophilia in New Zealand, and on a Marsden project with Otago colleagues investigating moral reasoning at the intersection of genetic difference and reproductive technologies.

Judith Littleton

Judith Littleton is Associate Professor of Biological Anthropology in the Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland. Her areas of interest include biological anthropology, biocultural perspectives on health, political ecology and human osteology. She has worked with Julie Park since 2002 on the study of tuberculosis in contemporary New Zealand using TB as a lens into local ecological networks of infectious disease.

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Published

01-12-2011

How to Cite

Park, J., & Littleton, J. (2011). Whakapapa in anthropological research on tuberculosis in the Pacific. Sites: A Journal of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies, 8(2), 6–31. https://doi.org/10.11157/sites-vol8iss2id180

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Section

Articles