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FOREWORD ~utseafaring canoes, deep-sea sailing skills, and the ability to navigate by naked-eye observations of the stars and sea and bird life, there would have been no Polynesian people as we know them today. These islanders are as much a creation of their voyaging technology as they were creators of it. Had they and their ancestors not developed this technology and associated sailing and navigational skills, the ancestral Polynesians could never have ventured out into the middle of the Pacific to find and settle so many islands and thereby develop into a sizable and culturally distinct people. These islands would have eventually been discovered and colonized, but by other peoples. Unfortunately, however, the great canoes that once carried Polynesian voyagers from island to island have long since disappeared, along with the traditional skills of sailing and navigating them. The recent realization of this cultural loss has led to major research efforts to comb the journals of the European explorers and other early visitors for information on the canoes they saw and the navigators they interviewed, to use computers to simulate Polynesian voyaging and colonization scenarios, and to reconstruct large Polynesian sailing canoes and then attempt to sail and navigate them in the traditional manner. While these efforts have been fruitful, they cannot substitute for firsthand experience with an on-going Polynesian canoe tradition. An analogous tradition exists today in the Caroline Islands of Micronesia where from a few atolls seagoing outrigger canoes still sail from island to island guided by navigators skilled at traditional, noninstrument naviga- xiv FOREWORD tion. A number of researchers have taken the opportunity to sail on these Micronesian canoes and to interview their navigators and watch them in action. However, while the information derived has been helpful in interpolating the spotty data on Polynesian voyaging, the experience has also been frustrating for it has made us all the more aware of what might have been learned if a dedicated observer had been able to sail with Polynesian navigators in their heyday. However, Polynesian voyaging researchers have been perhaps a bit too hasty in assuming that there was nothing to be learned in contemporary Polynesia about traditional sailing and navigation. True, the old sailing canoes and their navigators have long been gone from the major Polynesian centers. But there are a few out-of-the-way Polynesian islands where some facets of the old maritime tradition apparently survive today. One such island is Anuta, a tiny volcanic island which, though located within the Solomon Islands of Melanesia, is populated by Polynesians . Because of the small size of the island, its remoteness, and its lack of commercially viable resources, the Anutans there still live close to the traditional pattern of their ancestors. While their Tahitian, Hawaiian , and Samoan cousins may work on commercial plantations, in tourist hotels, or on the military bases of metropolitan powers, the Anutans still farm and fish in the traditional manner. As they still sail canoes in the open sea, using them for short interisland voyages as well as for fishing, this means that they are a living source for information about Polynesian sailing and navigation. True, the Anutans are not great sailors or navigators. Their canoes are small, and they regularly sail to only one other island, one which lies just over the horizon. Yet, they make and sail their canoes in more or less the same way that their ancestors did, and the sea so pervades their lives that much can be learned of the way Polynesians have adapted to their oceanic environment by looking at how Anutans interact with the sea. But an anthropologist is needed, someone who will go and live on Anuta, learn the language, and then go sailing with the Anutans and listen to their sea stories. Enter Richard Feinberg, who first went to Anuta in 1972 to spend fourteen months there studying the social organization and kinship structure of the islanders. Feinberg carried out his job well: he learned the language, gathered the data on how Anutan society was organized, and then published a number of works incorporating his findings. Although sailing and navigation were not his research focus, as a person who enjoyed being on or near the sea, Feinberg found himself drawn more and more to talking with Anutans about their voyages to other [18.191.216.163] Project MUSE (2024-04-24 18:16 GMT) FOREWORD xv islands, and to going to sea with them in their canoes. Feinberg was, in other...

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