Book

The material culture of Kiribati

Institute of Pacific Studies of the University of the South Pacific[Suva, Fiji] • Published In 1986 • Pages:

By: Koch, Gerd.

Abstract
This document describes the material culture of Kiribati peoples in a time when they still manufactured and used their own tools, utensils, furniture, and other goods. The focus is on illuminating the ingenuity of the Kiribati in turning locally available shells, bones, and plants—especially coconut palms—into practical and culturally-valued goods. Profuse illustrations show the design, manufacture, and uses of many items, such as sleeping mats, baskets, weapons, fishing gear, ornaments, drills, pumps, boats, etc. Additional topics include settlement pattern, house types, games, and organized ceremonials.
Subjects
Mats and basketry
Woven and other interworked fabrics
Knots and lashings
Shipbuilding
Boats
Fishing
General tools
Utensils
Furniture
Normal garb
Building interiors and arrangement
Arboriculture
Collecting
Diet
Acculturation and culture contact
culture
Kiribati
HRAF PubDate
2018
Region
Oceania
Sub Region
Micronesia
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Anthropologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Teferi Abate Adem ; 2016
Field Date
1963-1964
Coverage Date
1963-1965
Coverage Place
Nonouti, Tabiteuea, and Onotoa, Southern Kiribati, Republic of Kiribati
Notes
Gerd Koch ; English translation by Guy Slatter
Translation of: Materielle Kultur der Gilbert-Inseln.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 256-262) and index
LCCN
88140700
LCSH
Industries, Primitive--Kiribati
Kiribati--Material culture
Kiribati--Civilization