Imagen del autor

Peter Henry Buck (–1951)

Autor de Vikings of the Pacific

33 Obras 282 Miembros 3 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Sir Peter Buck graduated from the University of Otago in 1904 and spend the next 22 years practicing medicine among the Maoris. He served briefly in Parliament, acted as the director of the Bishop Museum in Honolulu, and was a professor of anthropology at Yale University. He was honored by the mostrar más Academy of the Royal Society of New Zealand and a medal was established in his honor to recognize excellence in the social sciences. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos
Nota de desambiguación:

(yid) VIAF:49595585

(mao) VIAF:PND:118882236

Créditos de la imagen: Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. Reference number: 1/2-037931-F

Series

Obras de Peter Henry Buck

Vikings of the Pacific (1938) 53 copias
The coming of the Maori (1950) 35 copias
Arts And Crafts Of Hawaii (2003) 35 copias
Mangaia and the mission (1993) 4 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Otros nombres
Te Rangi Hiroa
Fecha de nacimiento
1877-10 (circa)
Fecha de fallecimiento
1951-12-01
Género
male
Nacionalidad
New Zealand
Lugar de nacimiento
Urenui, New Zealand
Lugares de residencia
"Waitara, New Zealand"
Educación
Te Aute College
University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
Ocupaciones
doctor
health administrator
politician
museum director
anthropologist
Organizaciones
New Zealand Army (WWI)
Premios y honores
KCMG
Distinguished Service Order
Aviso de desambiguación
VIAF:PND:118882236

Miembros

Reseñas

“Faith in the Divine breeds confidence and dissipates fear, which after all is what man needs when facing the unknown. The Europeans applied his faith to guiding him into a safe haven in the journey after death, but the Polynesian applied his faith to inspire confidence in this life to voyage into unknown seas.” (page 22)

“The early missionaries labored to destroy belief in the Polynesian concepts of the world and the origin and power of the local gods. In this they were helped by the natives themselves who, eager to accept and adopt new ideas, broke almost completely with their old religion… Priests and scholars who had accepted the new teaching refused to pass on the concepts and the legends of their old cult. Thus the continuity of oral transmission was broken.” (page 169)

“In central and eastern Polynesia, the marae, because it carried a religious as well as a secular function, was dismantled and abandoned on conversion to Christianity; but in New Zealand, the marae still functions as the social center of the people… May the marae long continue to function, for so soon as it is abandoned, so soon will the maori lose his individuality.” (page 290)

Amazing adventure story of island life in ancient Polynesia. Legendary heroes, myths, gods, influence of Christianity, changing times, firsthand accounts from locals. All told by traveler, military leader, doctor, anthropologist etc… Sir Peter Buck. Half Maori, half Irish, he interprets culture of Polynesia with English; forming a descriptive, real, wondrous book.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
Michael.Bradham | otra reseña | May 9, 2014 |
Despite its rather romantic title, this is a serious study of the diffusion of Polynesian settlement in the Pacific, and an important contrast to the theories of Heyerdahl (Kon-Tiki). My impression is that most specialists come closer to agreeing with Buck, though there is much more recent work
 
Denunciada
antiquary | otra reseña | Jan 22, 2008 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
33
Miembros
282
Popularidad
#82,539
Valoración
3.9
Reseñas
3
ISBNs
31

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