Abstract

ABSTRACT This article builds on an existing body of scholarship on historical and intergenerational cultural trauma to elucidate deliberate attempts to eliminate Native Hawaiian cultural practices related to psychoactive drug use and replace them with the foreign (Western) tradition of alcohol use. This action, to instill alcohol as a component of colonial domination, was one example of the resulting assault on cultural identity that has often been overlooked, particularly in relation to transgenerational trauma in the history of Hawai‘i and the Hawaiian context. In this article, we argue for the use of the term historical trauma, introduced by Brave Heart, which allows for a more inclusive consideration of the many aspects of trauma. Drawing on literature related both to alcohol use in indigenous Hawaiian society and to the wider historical context of Hawai‘i since the late eighteenth century, we endeavor to demonstrate the correlation between the historical trauma experienced by the population and the incidence of alcohol consumption and alcohol use disorder. The article is intended to augment the existing paradigm on cultural trauma as it specifically relates to Hawaiians, and potentially to widen the explanatory power of this paradigm with regard to present-day psychoactive drug use among Hawaiians as well as the implications for treatments.

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