This event will be hosted in hybrid format, with both online and in-person attendance options. Online guests will receive Zoom details once they register for the seminar via Eventbrite.

The word community has a long history of use among Western scholars studying the Pacific Islands. The term is subject to a range of complexities, a result of disciplinary traditions as well as broader assumptions about how groups of human beings and other organisms behave. It would probably be impossible and indeed undesirable to arrive at a singular, agreed definition to cover the wide variety of uses and justifications for discussing communities past and present. But if the term is so multivalent, what actually are common aspects that emerge in the rhetoric of community research? Humanities and social science research has a lot to unpack to develop a closer understanding of the range of communities we study, and the living communities who might find relevance in the work that we do. In many cases, understanding the ways that community is expressed in local vernaculars (language but also arts, dance, cuisine) will be important to refining our use of the term, particularly as close partnerships with living Pacific communities becomes key to the future of research in the region.

About the speaker

James L. Flexner is Senior Lecturer in Historical Archaeology and Heritage at the University of Sydney. In July 2022 he begins an ARC Future Fellowship on the topic of ‘Archaeologies of community and colonialism in Oceania’. He has done extensive fieldwork in Hawaii, Vanuatu, and Australia. His next project focuses on the Gambier Archipelago in French Polynesia. His most recent book, Oceania, 800-1800CE, was published in the Cambridge University Press Elements Global Middle Ages series.

Event Speakers

Speaker bio (male) CHL

James L. Flexner

James Flexner is Senior Lecturer in Historical Archaeology and Heritage, University of Sydney. In 2022, he began an ARC Future Fellowship on Archaeologies of community and colonialism in Oceania. He has done extensive fieldwork in Hawaii, Vanuatu & Australia. His most recent book, Oceania, 800-1800CE, was published in the Cambridge University Press Elements Global Middle Ages series.

Seminar

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Seminar Room E Coombs Building (3.214) and Online via Zoom

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Event speakers

James L. Flexner

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