New Mana: Transformations of a Classic Concept in Pacific Languages and Cultures 2016
DOI: 10.22459/nm.04.2016.03
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Bodies Permeable and Divine: Tapu, Mana and the Embodiment of Hegemony in Pre‑Christian Tonga

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Cited by 9 publications
(5 citation statements)
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References 6 publications
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“…This links chiefs to key components of ideology in the region, specifically mana [22], which is thought to have a deep history in Polynesia [23]. Mana, a form of efficacy that is genealogically inherited and ethically mediated [24,25], is both a marker and key trait of leadership. Food and general abundance symbolize the presence of mana [21,22,26].…”
Section: The Development Of Chiefdoms In Polynesia: Land Territories ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This links chiefs to key components of ideology in the region, specifically mana [22], which is thought to have a deep history in Polynesia [23]. Mana, a form of efficacy that is genealogically inherited and ethically mediated [24,25], is both a marker and key trait of leadership. Food and general abundance symbolize the presence of mana [21,22,26].…”
Section: The Development Of Chiefdoms In Polynesia: Land Territories ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…41-42). Today, burial sites and places of mana (life force) can be kapu (Tomlinson & Tengan, 2016;Mills, 2016), but also fish that are spawning, a mountain reservoir of fresh water, or a forest in a particular season.…”
Section: Ancestorshipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, as kava spread across the Moana after being domesticated about 3,000 years ago (Lebot et al 1997), Blust and Turner both argued that a linguistic shift in the meaning/idea of mana took place, wherein mana became something that humans could also possess, do or be connected to. Mana became a potency, a generative force, one affecting fecundity, effectiveness, success, authority, honour and prestige that could be inherited, possessed and done, used by people and no longer relegated exclusively to natural phenomena (Blust 2007;Keesing 1984;Mead 2016;Mills 2016;Shore 1989;Tomlinson and Tengan 2016;Turner 2012). Mana became something that could be channelled in human form, and a particular feature of chiefliness, which is diversely understood and applied in different contexts.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is supported through tauhi vā, which can be expressed by making genealogical connections with each other, gifting, or drinking kava together, which assists in rendering the mana and tapu of interlocutors noa in a particular moment, resulting in more intimate and free, unrestrained closeness in storying. Mills (2016) explains that noa and ngofua are equivalent terms, and there are also other different terms that refer to the release, neutralisation or calibration of mana and tapu. However, in pre-Christian Tonga, "the most common [term] was ngofua, meaning 'not tapu', 'permissible' or 'easy'" (p. 82).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%