Confronting “hybrids” in Oceania

Fierce debates about racial crossing recurred in mid-19th-century French anthropology. This paper addresses the nexus of theory, field experience, and human materialities in scientific disputes about “hybrids”. Diverse global theoretical positions on interracial unions are calibrated with two empiri...

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Main Author: Bronwen Douglas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Éditions de la Sorbonne 2015-09-01
Series:Revue d’Histoire des Sciences Humaines
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/rhsh/2499
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author Bronwen Douglas
author_facet Bronwen Douglas
author_sort Bronwen Douglas
collection DOAJ
description Fierce debates about racial crossing recurred in mid-19th-century French anthropology. This paper addresses the nexus of theory, field experience, and human materialities in scientific disputes about “hybrids”. Diverse global theoretical positions on interracial unions are calibrated with two empirical/material registers: the reports, anatomical collections and anthropological syntheses made by French naval naturalists following encounters with Indigenous people during scientific voyages in Oceania to 1840; and the more focussed ethnographies, collections and anthropological comparisons made by naval medical officers after tours of duty in new French colonies in eastern Polynesia and New Caledonia from 1842. I assess the relative significance attributed to two different orders of materiality—the subjective materiality of field encounters with Indigenous people; and the seemingly objective materiality of objects—human skulls, other bodily remains, and moulages (plaster busts).
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institution Kabale University
issn 1963-1022
language English
publishDate 2015-09-01
publisher Éditions de la Sorbonne
record_format Article
series Revue d’Histoire des Sciences Humaines
spelling doaj-art-149ebd6637ca4708a0f1199da5cd47612025-08-20T03:54:29ZengÉditions de la SorbonneRevue d’Histoire des Sciences Humaines1963-10222015-09-0127276310.4000/rhsh.2499Confronting “hybrids” in OceaniaBronwen DouglasFierce debates about racial crossing recurred in mid-19th-century French anthropology. This paper addresses the nexus of theory, field experience, and human materialities in scientific disputes about “hybrids”. Diverse global theoretical positions on interracial unions are calibrated with two empirical/material registers: the reports, anatomical collections and anthropological syntheses made by French naval naturalists following encounters with Indigenous people during scientific voyages in Oceania to 1840; and the more focussed ethnographies, collections and anthropological comparisons made by naval medical officers after tours of duty in new French colonies in eastern Polynesia and New Caledonia from 1842. I assess the relative significance attributed to two different orders of materiality—the subjective materiality of field encounters with Indigenous people; and the seemingly objective materiality of objects—human skulls, other bodily remains, and moulages (plaster busts).http://journals.openedition.org/rhsh/2499French AnthropologyHybridityTheoryField EncountersFrench Naval Naturalists
spellingShingle Bronwen Douglas
Confronting “hybrids” in Oceania
Revue d’Histoire des Sciences Humaines
French Anthropology
Hybridity
Theory
Field Encounters
French Naval Naturalists
title Confronting “hybrids” in Oceania
title_full Confronting “hybrids” in Oceania
title_fullStr Confronting “hybrids” in Oceania
title_full_unstemmed Confronting “hybrids” in Oceania
title_short Confronting “hybrids” in Oceania
title_sort confronting hybrids in oceania
topic French Anthropology
Hybridity
Theory
Field Encounters
French Naval Naturalists
url http://journals.openedition.org/rhsh/2499
work_keys_str_mv AT bronwendouglas confrontinghybridsinoceania