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Defending friends : Robert Codrington, George Sarawia and Edward Wogale

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posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by Helen GardnerHelen Gardner
Friendship between nineteenth century missionary anthropologists and their converted cultural mentors was central to the gathering of cultural and linguistic information. This chapter traces the friendship between Anglican missionary/anthropologist, Robert Codrington, and brothers George Sarawia - first Melanesian priest - and Edward Wogale - deacon. Codrington's theological perspective on Melanesians and his close friendships with the pupils of the Melanesian Mission School at Norfolk Island allowed him to resist the increasing racialism of Atlantic science in the late nineteenth century and to challenge the evolutionist anthropology of the 1870s and 1880s. The chapter is based, in part, on a cache of letters from Wogale and Sarawia to Codrington written in Mota, the lingua franca of the Anglican Mission.

History

Title of book

Atlantic world in the Antipodes : effects and transformations since the eighteenth century

Chapter number

7

Pagination

146 - 165

Publisher

Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Place of publication

Newcastle upon Tyne, England

ISBN-13

9781443837446

ISBN-10

144383744X

Language

eng

Publication classification

B1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2012, Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Extent

12

Editor/Contributor(s)

K Fullagar

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