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Monthly Archives: November 2014

Kānaka Maoli at the University of Hawai‘i

One task of the archival researcher is to identify and grapple with absence: absent information, absent evidence, absent data, absent voices. It is easy to be seduced by the wealth of information in the RASRL Collection – the breadth of coverage, the number of papers, the scope of information. But periodically, we’ve stopped to contemplate…

November 22, 2014 in Ethnicity and Race, Hawaiians, Student Life.

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Categories

  • Archival Research
  • Community
  • Ethnicity and Race
  • Haole
  • Hawaiian language
  • Hawaiians
  • Jobs and Occupations
  • Juvenile Delinquents
  • Mapping the Territory
  • Maps
  • Military
  • Plantation Towns
  • RASRL Collection
  • RASRL writers
  • Research methodology
  • Social Process in Hawai'i
  • Social Sciences
  • Sociology
  • Student Life
  • Taxi dancehalls
  • Teachers and Education
  • Territorial Normal and Training School
  • Uncategorized
  • University of Hawai'i
  • Urban Honolulu
  • Veterans
  • Waiale‘e Industrial School
  • Waialua
  • William Carlson Smith
  • Women Students
  • World War II

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Recent Posts

  • Ten Cents a Dance: Taxi-Dance Halls in Honolulu, 1935
  • Five Women’s Dormitories in 1929 Honolulu
  • A Boy’s Life at the Waiale‘e Industrial School, 1909 to 1916
  • Maunalaha, a Study of an Urban Hawaiian Community
  • Judith and George: Dating, Dancing, and the Limits of Racial Tolerance
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this is... The Neighborhood

the Story within the Story

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