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Native Planters in Old Hawaii: Their Life, Lore, and Environment (ebook)

Originally published in 1972, Native Planters in Old Hawaii is the fruit of a brilliant collaboration between Pacific anthropologist, E. S. Craighill Handy, his wife, Elizabeth Green Handy, and the beloved expert on Hawaiian language and culture, Mary Kawena Pukui. Today, this classic work remains invaluable to scholars and practitioners alike as both a precious ethnographic resource on Hawaiian planting practices and as an in-depth examination of Hawaiians relationship to land. The book discusses basic patterns of Hawaiian planting culture, the gods worshipped, class and land divisions, water rights and irrigation techniques, tools, crafts, and general horticultural skills. It includes an examination of how people shaped their cultivation practices to the varied Hawaiian environment, and documents various myths and rituals connected to planting. 

Written by E. S. Craighill Handy and Elizabeth Green Handy with the collaboration of Mary Kawena Pukui 
Date of Publication: 1972 
Pages: 676 
Bishop Museum Bulletin 233 

Digital Edition ISBN 978-1-58178-124-3

While this title is out of print, this ebook edition offers a new experience of this classic work. It may be purchased here as an EPUB, or by selecting one of the buttons below 


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