Postcolonialism, neo-colonialism and the "Pacific way" a critique of (un)critical approaches Stephanie Lawson

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: State, society and governance in Melanesia: discussion paper ; 2010/5 | State, society and governance in Melanesia (Series)Publication details: [Canberra, Australia] Australian National University, ANU College of Asia and the Pacific 2010Description: 16 p. 30 cmISSN:
  • 1328-7854
Subject(s): Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
  • Also available in an electronic ed.
Summary: "When Fiji’s first Prime Minister, Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara, first used the term the “Pacific Way" during an address to the UN General Assembly in 1970, its specific referent was the smooth transition to independence of Fiji and several other Pacific island states that had thus far gone through the decolonization process. The “Pacific Way" was soon used to denote a collective political identity for the island states of the Pacific region in the postcolonial period and, together with the “Melanesian Way", developed the characteristics of an anticolonial discourse — something that had been noticeably lacking in Mara’s original formulation. During much the same period, Edward Said’s critical study, Orientalism, began to make its mark, especially in terms of its critique of the nexus between power and knowledge and the way in which this supported colonial hegemony. This in turn provided an important stimulus for the development of postcolonial theory as an anti-hegemonic discourse critical not just of colonial history but manifestations of neocolonialism in the contemporary period. In this paper I suggest that although the “Pacific Way” is generally presented as a counter-hegemonic discourse, in some manifestations it provides support for other kinds of hegemony. This is because it has so far evinced very little concern with the hegemonic practices of local elites. At the same time, it continues to invest in the overarching West/non-West bifurcation of the world, which also produces quite simplistic images of contemporary regional politics that mask a much more complex set of social, political and economic relations."
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Includes bibliographical references (p. 15-16)

"When Fiji’s first Prime Minister, Ratu Sir Kamisese Mara, first used the term the “Pacific Way" during an address to the UN General Assembly in 1970, its specific referent was the smooth transition to independence of Fiji and several other Pacific island states that had thus far gone through the decolonization process. The “Pacific Way" was soon used to denote a collective political identity for the island states of the Pacific region in the postcolonial period and, together with the “Melanesian Way", developed the characteristics of an anticolonial discourse — something that had been noticeably lacking in Mara’s original formulation. During much the same period, Edward Said’s critical study, Orientalism, began to make its mark, especially in terms of its critique of the nexus between power and knowledge and the way in which this supported colonial hegemony. This in turn provided an important stimulus for the development of postcolonial theory as an anti-hegemonic discourse critical not just of colonial history but manifestations of neocolonialism in the contemporary period. In this paper I suggest that although the “Pacific Way” is generally presented as a counter-hegemonic discourse, in some manifestations it provides support for other kinds of hegemony. This is because it has so far evinced very little concern with the hegemonic practices of local elites. At the same time, it continues to invest in the overarching West/non-West bifurcation of the world, which also produces quite simplistic images of contemporary regional politics that mask a much more complex set of social, political and economic relations."

Also available in an electronic ed.