Linguistique de l’écrit

Revue internationale en libre accès

Livre | Chapitre

184162

Pu'u Kohola

spatial genealogy of a Hawaiian symbolic landscape

Thierry Herman

pp. 91-108

Résumé

This chapter highlights our contention that symbolization is not merely an act of cognition, but rather a process of enactment. Historical events are lived on the basis of how they manifest in the shaping of the present. Experiences of contemporary Native Hawaiians reflect the presence of past layers that are a precognitive witnessing through their body schema, the behaviors that express the meaning of their existential situations. The Pu'u Kohola commemorative ceremony lends credence that an intellectualist notion of symbolization is anemic, an insufficient constitution of meaning. Hawaiians have taken care to enact a symbolic event that resonates with their experiences, expressive of a lived-history, the sedimentation of layers of existential meaning that needs to be symbolically gestured in the confirmation of identities. The ceremony translates this meaning of the "who—landscape intertwining" into a spatialized/spatializing symbolic incorporation/ek-stasis, intensified and heightened through an embodied participatory sociality.

Détails de la publication

Publié dans:

Backhaus Gary, Murungi John (2009) Symbolic landscapes. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 91-108

DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4020-8703-5_4

Citation complète:

Herman Thierry, 2009, Pu'u Kohola: spatial genealogy of a Hawaiian symbolic landscape. In G. Backhaus & J. Murungi (eds.) Symbolic landscapes (91-108). Dordrecht, Springer.