Book

Kinship to kingship: gender hierarchy and state formation in the Tongan Islands

University of Texas Press (14) • Published In 1987 • Pages: xviii, 326

By: Gailey, Christine Ward.

Abstract
This is a sophisticated analysis of the modern transformation of Tonga society, which gives a central role to gender relations. According to Gailey, women held a privileged position in traditional Tonga society, both as producers of valuables (KOLOA) for the gift economy and as conduits of sacred power ('EIKI), which complimented and buttressed male chiefly authority. The most sacred and highly ranked person in Tonga was the older sister of the paramount chief. In general, all sisters and especially fathers' sisters (FAHU) had power over their brothers and nephews, respectively, in terms of rights to labor and produce. Gailey shows how Christianity, an emerging household-based commodity production, and constitutional government curtailed these privileges, diminishing women's status and power and helping to inaugurate a class society.
Subjects
Exchange and transfers
Status, role, and prestige
Gender status
Classes
Kin relationships
Kindreds and ramages
Form and rules of government
Chief executive
Missions
culture
Tongans
HRAF PubDate
2006
Region
Oceania
Sub Region
Polynesia
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard; 2004
Field Date
1986
Coverage Date
1450-1971
Coverage Place
Tonga
Notes
Christine Ward Gailey
Although the first part of this book is theoretical, it is indexed for subjects. Tonga's stratified society is indexed differently for each period: STATUS, ROLE, AND PRESTIGE (554) and TERRITORIAL HIERARCHY (631) for traditional chiefdom and CLASSES (565) and CHIEF EXECUTIVE 643 for the post-constitutional, class society
Includes bibliographical references (p. 291-315) and index
LCCN
87010804
LCSH
Tongans