This book weaves together theories of pre-Columbian trans-Pacific contact between Oceania and the Americas and analyses them from a history of ideas perspective. Despite limited factual evidence, trans-Pacific contact theories between the Americas and Oceania have been discussed in various forms since the sixteenth century and remain a persistent trope.
To provide a context for the history of ideas of trans-Pacific contact involving the Americas and Oceania, this book addresses the changing conceptions of the Pacific according to scholars from Europe and the Americas, the development of science and later anthropology and archaeology in this region and in the Americas, and the growing understanding of the history of settlement of the Americas and the Pacific. This book covers views predominantly from the Global South, making them more accessible to an Anglophone audience worldwide.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1: Did Amerindians or Pacific Islanders voyage long distances to and from the Americas before 1492.-Chapter 2: The Enigma about Amerindian Origins in the Sixteenth Century.- Chapter 3: Queen Moo from Chichén Itzá and the Lost Pacific Continent.- Chapter 4: Kumara, Skulls, Stone Clubs, and Voyages.- Chapter 5: The Children of the Sun.- Chapter 6: European Scholarship and the Study of the Ancient Past of the Americas in the Twentieth Century.- Chapter 7: `Impossible, Why? : Kon-Tiki, Las Balsas, and other Experimental Voyages that traversed the Pacific.- Chapter 8: Ideas about Long-Distance Sailing Techniques, Traditions and Theories.- Chapter 9: Twentieth-Century Ideas about Contact with Peru/Ecuador, Chile and Argentina.- Chapter 10: Reconsidering Trans-Pacific Contact: Its Hidden History.- Chapter 11: Conclusion.
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