Abstract

This article explores the relationship between Heidegger’s phenomenological ontology and Maurice Leenhardt’s ethnographic study of New Caledonia. For Leenhardt, the kamo, or authentic person, was a participatory personage existing in relationship with other humans, with nature and with mythic beings. He used the term mythe vécu (living myth) to argue for an under-standing of myth that was grounded in experience, rather than narrative, and to elaborate his understanding of a uniquely Melanesian mode of Being. I argue that, as well as echoing some of Heidegger’s insights, Leenhardt’s view of mythic consciousness has much in common with Sartre’s analysis of emotional consciousness. The ‘experience’ I refer to in this discussion is that of the Hula, on the south-east coast of Papua New Guinea. Drawing also on some other Melanesian ethnography, I suggest that an existentialist perspective not only extends the relevance of Leenhardt’s interpretation of myth but also constitutes an important development in our understanding of Melanesian ontology.

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