Abstract

Hawai'i is heralded as a model of U.S. multiculturalism due to its demographic diversity, yet those wishing to invalidate Barak Obama's “Americanness” and his “blackness” depict the state as extranational. Local debates over sovereignty, however, can divide islanders into Hawaiians and colonial settlers. These national and local discourses of Hawai'i curiously neglect Blacks, who are an absent presence and a present absence in the islands: despite the disproportionate influence that Black cultural forms (particularly hip hop and reggae) exercise on the islands’ culture, Hawai'i's Blacks and their histories remain virtually unknown. Hawai'i's colonial and immigrant history, imported U.S. racist thinking, and indigenous Hawaiian ideologies have shaped ideas of belonging and difference in which culture, race, and ancestry are intertwined. The biologization of race developed on the continent and is rooted in the notion of blood purity that benefits Whites. The quantification of blood and a hierarchical sortin...

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