2011
DOI: 10.1353/cp.2011.0036
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Fleeting Substantiality: The Samoan Giant in US Popular Discourse

Abstract: In this article I draw examples from the broader terrain of academic and popular literature, news media, television, and film to explore questions regarding representations of Samoans, and especially Samoan men, in the United States. The mediated accessibility of Samoans, via televised sports and entertainment, combines with their relative geographic and demographic inaccessibility to produce popular images of a population that the vast majority of Americans know very little about. Such representations are gen… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…This is especially important as large “Polynesian” bodies have been racialized as ignorant, primitive, and lazy and islands like Samoa are quickly glossed in media, scholarly publication, and policy as some of the “fattest nations” on earth (cf. Henderson, 2011; Hobart and Maroney, 2019). Critically examining dance also speaks to the enduring sexualization and commodification of “Polynesian” women and the central role that these essentialized ideas play in the ongoing dispossession of Indigenous people in Oceania (see Imada, 2012; Trask, 1999).…”
Section: Theorizing With Oceanic Epistemologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is especially important as large “Polynesian” bodies have been racialized as ignorant, primitive, and lazy and islands like Samoa are quickly glossed in media, scholarly publication, and policy as some of the “fattest nations” on earth (cf. Henderson, 2011; Hobart and Maroney, 2019). Critically examining dance also speaks to the enduring sexualization and commodification of “Polynesian” women and the central role that these essentialized ideas play in the ongoing dispossession of Indigenous people in Oceania (see Imada, 2012; Trask, 1999).…”
Section: Theorizing With Oceanic Epistemologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the continental United States, Pacific culture may be visible in popular culture but Islanders, with a handful of exceptions in sports and entertainment, generally are not (Henderson, 2011). Bonnie Pauahi Tysse (Bay Area, Hawaiian) describes this dynamic as "being seen and unseen at the same time."…”
Section: Nrmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This means that many Bay Area Islanders are (mis)read as Hispanic or Latino, black or African American, Asian, or white (Henderson, 2011;M. Perez, 2002), though this may also have to do with the fact that Islanders living in the United States are the most likely racial group in the country to identify themselves as belonging to two or more races (Duncan, 2012).…”
Section: Nrmentioning
confidence: 99%