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2700:2025:4 [2025/03/16 17:12] – [Did Hawaiians really think that Cook, a human, was really a god, Lono?] Ryan Schram (admin)2700:2025:4 [2025/03/16 17:13] (current) – old revision restored (2025/03/16 17:10) Ryan Schram (admin)
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   * Now Cook was matter out of place. He did not belong. Lono isn’t supposed to come back right away. What were once friendly and cooperative relationships go downhill fast. Fights. Killings. And then Cook is killed by a crowd on the beach and his body is taken ashore (Sahlins 1981, 23–25).   * Now Cook was matter out of place. He did not belong. Lono isn’t supposed to come back right away. What were once friendly and cooperative relationships go downhill fast. Fights. Killings. And then Cook is killed by a crowd on the beach and his body is taken ashore (Sahlins 1981, 23–25).
  
- +==== Did Hawaiians really think that Cook, a human, was really a god, Lono? ====
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-==== Did Hawaiians //really// think that Cook, a human, was //really// a god, Lono? ====+
  
 Sahlins’s argument has been provocative, and led to a rather typical kind of debate in anthropology: Sahlins’s argument has been provocative, and led to a rather typical kind of debate in anthropology:
2700/2025/4.1742170345.txt.gz · Last modified: 2025/03/16 17:12 by Ryan Schram (admin)