Keeping the Core: John Dominis Holt, Charles Kenn, and Models for Definition and Preservation of Kanaka Intellectual Culture in the Mid-Twentieth Century

dc.contributor.advisor Riley Sousa, Ashley
dc.contributor.author Duncan, Brady Austin
dc.contributor.committeemember Ly, Aliou
dc.contributor.committeemember Chang, David A
dc.date.accessioned 2021-12-07T17:03:56Z
dc.date.available 2021-12-07T17:03:56Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.date.updated 2021-12-07T17:03:56Z
dc.description.abstract This study examines the works of and public memory surrounding two prominent Native Hawaiian intellectuals of the mid-twentieth century, John Dominis Holt IV and Charles William Kenn. Despite the relative anonymity of the latter among non-academic circles, both men proved crucial to the evolution of Indigenous Hawaiian thought and praxes of preservation throughout their careers. The principal aim of the study was to examine the output of both figures to identify and compare their stances on the attributes, practices, and concepts integral to a broader Native Hawaiian identity, the state of Hawaiian intellectual heritage and preservation at the time of their writing, and the prospects for the same in a post-annexation, foreign-ruled Hawai‘i. These stances were then subject to a juxtapositional analysis, identifying those points of agreement and contention between Holt’s and Kenn’s understandings of Hawaiian intellectual and cultural identity and their history. General findings suggest that while both Holt and Kenn took great issue with reluctance surrounding the preservation of Native intellectual products introduced to the populace by foreign religious officials and institutions, both saw a vital interest in the same among young people and sought to use various means of dissemination to share their knowledge and pride of self with other Indigenous Hawaiian people. Perhaps due to a childhood spent in the company of former aristocrats traumatized by the loss of land and title to Western invaders, however, Holt defined his Native identity in the past tense, using a language of loss or diminishment, while Kenn, a practitioner of Native religion and martial arts, saw a far more present continuity of “traditional” Indigenous Hawaiian practices in his daily life. The study itself utilized simple textual analyses of written works produced by Holt and Kenn throughout their careers, privileging those pieces explicitly treating with Native identity where possible and aiming to incorporate works intended for academic, enthusiast, and broad lay audiences alike in roughly equal measure. To properly contextualize their contents and concepts, themes, and figures from Hawaiian history integral to my analysis of their portfolios, a secondary source base spanning academic works on religion, linguistics, anthropology, folklore, and history, among other fields, as well as periodicals, commentary, and volumes directed towards broader audiences is consulted throughout.
dc.description.degree M.A.
dc.identifier.uri https://jewlscholar.mtsu.edu/handle/mtsu/6578
dc.language.rfc3066 en
dc.publisher Middle Tennessee State University
dc.source.uri http://dissertations.umi.com/mtsu:11509
dc.subject Charles Kenn
dc.subject Hawaii
dc.subject Intellectual History
dc.subject John Dominis Holt
dc.subject Kanaka
dc.subject Preservation
dc.subject History
dc.subject History of Oceania
dc.thesis.degreelevel masters
dc.title Keeping the Core: John Dominis Holt, Charles Kenn, and Models for Definition and Preservation of Kanaka Intellectual Culture in the Mid-Twentieth Century
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