List of Illustrations
Map of the Pacific Ocean and Vanuatu
Map of South Efate
Map of Port Vila
Acknowledgments
Preface
Introduction
1. "The Shortage of Women Is the Cause of These Courts": Imbalanced
Sex Ratios, Native Courts, and Marriage Disputes Made Public,
1910–1950
2. "The Nurses Looked Out for Us!": Hospital Births, Relational
Infrastructures, and Public Concerns, 1950–1970
3. "It Will Help Planning for the Future": Making Men’s and Women’s
"Subsistence" Public Knowledge in the First Census, 1966–1967
4. "I Just Wanted to Be Invisible": "Young Mothers" from Global
Discourse to Village Experience, 2010–2020
5. "Well-Being for Melanesia": Alternative Indicators, Massage
Healers, and Reciprocal Relationships, 2010–2020
Epilogue: Relations of Reproduction and Survival in the
Anthropocene
Appendix 1: Population Size from 1850 to 2020
Appendix 2: Overview of Biomedical Health Services in Vanuatu in
1954
Works Cited
Alexandra Widmer is an assistant professor of social anthropology at York University.
"With intricate care, Widmer accounts for the problematization of
both population decline and growth in Vanuatu. This is the richest
of studies on politics and socialities of reproduction, in colonial
and postcolonial contexts. A major contribution."--Alison Bashford,
author of Global Population: History, Geopolitics, and Life on
Earth
"In this incisive, original, and absorbing book, Alexandra Widmer
explores the intersecting politics of demography, reproduction,
biomedical knowledge, and Indigenous systems of healing in the
south-western Pacific. This engaging and important contribution to
medical anthropology is based on both fieldwork in Vanuatu, and a
careful analysis of the imperial archive, resonating with wider
debates about health care, citizenship, globalization, and the
enduring legacies of colonialism, as they inform contemporary
identities, policies, and practices within the Pacific and
beyond."--Gregory Rawlings, Head of the Social Anthropology
Programme, University of Otago
" Moral Figures is innovative both in its thematic focus and its
methods. Its central aim is to reveal how 'reproduction' was made
public in Vanuatu - and in so doing, it challenges Eurocentric
binary presumptions about public and domestic domains and the
importation of models based in advanced capitalist formations to
Vanuatu, a Pacific country which is situated on a 'capitalist
frontier' and where Indigenous forms of relationality and
non-commodified life are sustained and celebrated. It is
path-breaking in the way that it tells a compelling story that
traverses a historical arc between c.1910 and 2020, and between the
scales of an archipelago wide 'national' narrative and of a
specific place: Pango village on the outskirts of the capital Port
Vila, Efate. The author's central concept of 'moral figures' is
original and persuasive. More than wordplay on the dual meaning of
'figures, ' it explores how quantitative 'figures' about population
(censuses, metrics, indicators) conjugate with 'figures'
exemplifying particular types of people or situations (an
imbalanced sex ratio, nurse-midwives, subsistence, young mothers,
well-being). So seemingly 'raw' numbers are manufactured and imbued
with moral meanings and discursive power."--Margaret Jolly,
Professor Emerita, Australian National University
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