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TZID:Pacific/Honolulu
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CLASS:PUBLIC
CREATED:20260617T160404Z
DESCRIPTION:Department of Philosophy Colloquium Series for Indigenous Philosophy\n\nSpeaker: Kaipulaumakaniolono Keala\n\nAbstract: Kānaka Maoli are disproportionately affected by attacks on ʻāina in that it directly affects our means of production (especially of subsistence and housing), the onslaught on ʻāina is inevitably an attack on Kānaka Maoli. With this identification of kānaka and ʻāina, Kanaka Maoli responses to these issues are largely founded on a language of identity. Is this identification, however, consistent with ʻŌiwi thought? In this presentation I will argue categorically "no." I will demonstrate that ʻŌiwi thought is founded on non-identity: the emergence of kānaka from nature is conceived primarily as a constitutional estrangement and alienation in the ʻŌiwi mind. 
DTEND;TZID=Pacific/Honolulu:20260430T020000Z
DTSTAMP:20260617T160404Z
DTSTART;TZID=Pacific/Honolulu:20260430T003000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260617T160404Z
LOCATION:Sakamaki Hall C-308
PRIORITY:5
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY;LANGUAGE=en-us:Ka ʻĀina, ke Kapu a me ke Kanaka: The Social-Natural Metabolism in the ʻŌi
TRANSP:OPAQUE
UID:178174824445460web-support-l@lists.hawaii.edu
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