Fiche technique
Format : Broché
Nb de pages : 205 pages
Poids : 400 g
Dimensions : 21cm X 30cm
EAN : 9782904171666
An account of the Marquisas Islands
1797-1799
Quatrième de couverture
On the 7th of June 1797, when William Pascoe Crook disembarked from the Duff onto the Marquesan island of Tahuata, he had just turned 22 years of age. At that time, the society which took him in was a traditional one, forced to deal with the natural disasters of drought and its ensuing famine, and the new products brought for trade by western travellers, whalers and beachcombers - particularly alcohol and firearms.
Because he took the trouble to learn to speak their language, Crook became an important witness to these first contacts, as well as to the new everyday lifestyle of the Marquesans, their customs and their aspirations - and their resistance to foreign ideas.
In his Account, Crook reports the words of Kiatonui, one of the main chiefs of the island of Nukuhiva, who exclaimed, "How can Mr Crook claim to know God, when he cannot even tell one tree from another ?"
The originality and insight of this Account of the Marquesas Islands (published now for the first time in a bilingual English and French edition) have been enhanced both by contemporary testimonies concerning Crook's adventure and by today's prefaces by Professor Greg Dening and His Grace Bishop Le Cleac'h.
In the Pacific, the shock from the meeting of cultures in the 18th century continues to make waves into the 21st.