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Wayward Women: Sexuality and Agency in a New Guinea Society PDF

297 Pages·2006·1.41 MB·English
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Wayward Women Wayward Women Sexuality and Agency in a New Guinea Society Holly Wardlow UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS Berkeley / Los Angeles / London University of California Press Berkeley and Los Angeles, California University of California Press, Ltd. London, England © 2006 by The Regents of the University of California Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Wardlow, Holly. Wayward women: sexuality and agency in a New Guinea society / Holly Wardlow. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn0–520-24559-8 (alk. paper).—isbn0–520-24560-1 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Women, Huli—Papua New Guinea—Tari District—Sexual Behavior. 2. Women, Huli—Papua New Guinea—Tari District—Social conditions. 3. Women, Huli—Papua New Guinea—Tari District—Economic condi- tions. 4. Bride price—Papua New Guinea—Tari District. 5. Courtship— Papua New Guinea—Tari District. 6. Tari District (Papua New Guinea)— Social conditions. 7. Tari District (Papua New Guinea)—Economic con- ditions. I. Title. du740.42.w354 2006 305.409956'1—dc22 2005028155 Manufactured in the United States of America 15 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 This book is printed on New Leaf EcoBook 60, containing 60% post- consumer waste, processed chlorine free; 30% de-inked recycled fiber, ele- mental chlorine free; and 10% FSC-certified virgin fiber, totally chlorine free. EcoBook 60 is acid-free and meets the minimum requirements of ansi/astm d5634–01 (Permanence of Paper). Contents List of Illustrations vii Acknowledgments ix Introduction 1 1. “Tari is a jelasplace”: The Fieldwork Setting 30 2. “To finish my anger”: Body and Agency among Huli Women 63 3. “I am not the daughter of a pig!”: The Changing Dynamics of Bridewealth 99 4. “You, I don’t even count you”: Becoming aPasinja Meri 134 5. “Eating her own vagina”: Passenger Women and Sexuality 166 6. “When the pig and the bamboo knife are ready”: The Huli Dawe Anda 191 Conclusion 221 Notes 239 References 255 Index 273 Illustrations Maps 1. Papua New Guinea 37 2. Southern Highlands Province 38 Figures All photos were taken by the author. 1. Young woman inside fence 13 2. Tari airstrip 32 3. Line of dartboards 33 4. Power pylon 44 5. Huli trench 52 6. Rural house 65 7. Women carrying heavy loads 68 8. Woman with lopped off fingertip 79 9. Playing snooker 83 10. Waiting for court to begin 88 11. Bridewealth pigs 112 12. Men prepared for battle 135 13. Men outside a trade store 169 14. Boy having face painted by his mother’s brother 179 15. Woman inside the anda 226 vii viii ILLUSTRATIONS Tables Population pyramid showing migration patterns 60 Injury cases at Tari Hospital 87 Acknowledgments Many people provided help and support during my fieldwork in Papua New Guinea and during the writing of this book. In Tari, Mary Michael was a particularly good friend—funny, insightful, loyal, and affectionate. Jacinta Haiyabe and other women at the Tari District Women’s Associa- tion—Janet Magabe, Betty Tom, Alison, and Regina—were also good friends and helpful informants. The Tari Hospital staff, and especially Pauline Agilo, were consistently obliging. Thanks also to Peter Ekopia and his wife Margaret, to James Samkul and his family, to Maria Kati, and to Jenny Yaliya for their help with this project. I had a number of field assistants along the way, but Henry Hariki Pa- gana was the most perspicacious and steadfast, and made the transcrip- tion, translation, and analysis of village court cases particularly fun since he also was driven to understand the aims, strategies, and rhetorical artistry of the various actors. I learned recently that his older brother, Ato Louis Pagana, died. For a brief period of time near the end of my field- work Ato hosted me and helped me to interview men who attended dawe anda. At that time I wished that I had met him far earlier since he was such an intelligent and thoughtful man. I am terribly sorry about his death. My condolences also to the family of Nancy Tapili, who also briefly worked as my field assistant. Special thanks go to the Papua New Guinea Institute of Medical Research and especially Michael Alpers, Deborah Lehman, Carol Jenkins, Travis Jenkins, John Vail, James Marabe, and all of the staff of what was then the Tari Research Unit. Travis Jenkins patiently helped me take still photographs of the video ix

Description:
Written with uncommon grace and clarity, this extremely engaging ethnography analyzes female agency, gendered violence, and transactional sex in contemporary Papua New Guinea. Focusing on Huli "passenger women," (women who accept money for sex) Wayward Women explores the socio-economic factors that
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