Book

Palauan society: a study of contemporary native life in the Palau Islands

University of Oregon Publications (20) • Published In 1949 • Pages: 5, 223

By: Barnett, H. G. (Homer Garner).

Abstract
This report is the result of nine months' fieldwork in Belau from the end of August 1947 to May 1948. During this period the author and an associate lived in the village of Ulimang in Ngarard District on Babeldaob Island. Unless stated otherwise most of the descriptive ethnography presented here is relevant only to the people of Ngarard, and then only to the end of the 1940s. Topics covered in this source are food and food production, work patterns, kinship, Belauan money, wealth manipulation to achieve status, life cycle events, social and political stratification in the society, and religion. Status and status manipulation through the use of 'valuables' or money and kin relationships are dominant themes in this work. History, although not dealt with extensively, is discussed from the standpoint of subsequent German, Japanese and American administrations and their effect in producing culture change in the society.
Subjects
Community structure
Settlement patterns
Diet
Status, role, and prestige
Accumulation of wealth
Manipulative mobility
Cereal agriculture
Production and supply
Labor and leisure
Boats
External trade
Individual enterprise
Kin relationships
Lineages
Clans
Family relationships
Ethnosociology
Medium of exchange
Mythology
General character of religion
Missions
Sociocultural trends
Culture summary
culture
Belau
HRAF PubDate
2017
Region
Oceania
Sub Region
Micronesia
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle; 1989
Field Date
1947-1948
Coverage Date
1940-1949
Coverage Place
Ulimang, Ngarard District, Babeldaob Island, Republic of Belau
Notes
[by] Homer G. Barnett
LCCN
49047200
LCSH
Palauans