Independent Reading Blog
Friday, May 23, 2014
Obituary
Princess Victoria Kawekiu Lunalilo Kalaninuihilapalapala Kaiulani, beloved daughter of Princess Likelike and Archibald Cleghorn, has passed away on March 6, 1899, at the age of twenty-four. Her doctors confirmed that her death was due to rheumatism of the heart, likely caused by her frequent outings in cold and stormy weather. Kauilani’s death saddens all Hawaiians, for whom she seemed the last hope of a free Hawaii. She had been educated and raised similarly to European monarchs, in hopes that one day she could rule Hawaii and restore the islands to their original state of independence. Kaiulani will be missed by family and community alike. Her vast amounts of land will be willed to her descendants to care for as she has in her short lifetime.
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Works Cited
Works Cited
"Hawaii Is Diverse, But Far From A Racial Paradise." NPR. NPR. Web. 21 May 2014.
"Hawaiian Annexation." Ushistory.org. Independence Hall Association. Web. 20 May 2014.
"Hawaiian Annexation." Ushistory.org. Independence Hall Association. Web. 20 May 2014.
"Kingdom of Hawaii Illegal "overthrow" History in Detail..." Kingdomhawaii. Web. 21 May 2014.
"The Monarchy." The Monarchy. Web. 21 May 2014.
Payne, Alexander, Nat Faxon, Jim Rash, and Kaui Hart. Hemmings. The Descendants. Covina, Calif.?: Willow and Oak, 2010. Print.
Payne, Alexander, Nat Faxon, Jim Rash, and Kaui Hart. Hemmings. The Descendants. Covina, Calif.?: Willow and Oak, 2010. Print.
"A Site to Help You Learn More about Your Hawaiian Genealogy." Welcome to Hawaiian Roots A Site to Help You Learn More about Your Hawaiian Genealogy RSS. Web. 21 May 2014.
Expository Essay- Hawaii's Last Hope
Healy Crews
Ms. Romano
4 AP English, 6th Period
21 May 2014
Hawaii’s Last Hope
The Descendants by Kaui Hart Hemmings goes beyond detailing the issues of a man dealing with death and the raising of his children to describe the racial tension that has plagued Hawaii for centuries. When Matt King has to decide between selling his family’s acres of unblemished Kauai land or preserving it and protecting the Hawaii that his ancestor’s knew, he ends up also caught in the crossfire of those who want to make money from the sale, and those who feel that parts of Hawaii should remain unindustrialized. His conflict represents the racial tensions in Hawaii, which began when Captain Cook first stepped onto Kauai’s shores. As it turns out, Hawaii isn’t the peaceful set of islands it seems to be. Instead, underlying tensions based on socio-economic and racial differences remain a major issue.
Before Hawaii was annexed into the United States, the islands had their own government and and natives were very successful. Today “Native Hawaiians [...] have been pushed to the margins. And it's not a nice place to be [...] Those margins include high incarceration levels, very little land ownership and poor education” (NPR). Matt King is a direct descendant of the royal family of Hawaii, but also of an American, which upsets many Hawaiians, who don’t feel he deserves to control their land. This puts him in a tough position, because on top of his mixed heritage, he also has a lot of money, which makes it hard for native Hawaiians to identify and sympathize with him. The same issues of land ownership, race, and income haunt real life Hawaii too.
Like his ancestor, Princess Kaiulani, Matt King represents a “last hope” for Hawaii. That hope is for Hawaii to return to a beautiful and independent nation, where Native Hawaiians have power and freedom. In the years before Hawaii’s annexation “keeping European powers out of Hawaii became a principal foreign policy goal” for the royal family (US History). When that failed, Hawaiians turned to Kaiulani, who “became the first member of the Hawaiian royalty to receive the kind of training traditionally given to the children of European monarchs” (Hawaiian Roots). Despite her European-like upbringing and Scottish father, Kaiulani remained loyal to old Hawaii and remained anti-annexation until her death. Matt King lived in a similar way, with all of the privilege that comes from being part of a wealthy white family, but the love for Hawaii that came from growing up Hawaiian. When King decides to keep the land he’s restoring a piece of old Hawaii and giving back a tiny bit of power to the frustrated natives, which is what makes him the second “last hope” for Hawaii.
The issues in Hawaii do go beyond arguments over the preservation and ownership of land. Soci-economic and racial tensions are deep seeded in Hawaiian life, because of the anger Hawaiians felt over annexation. However, Hemmings is saying that as long as there are people who care about preserving the nature and cultures of Hawaii, there is always hope that one day Hawaii can be the peaceful group of islands that it is meant to be.
Dear Reader
Dear Reader,
I decided to research Hawaiian history for my project, because I noticed in The Descendants that Kaui Hart Hemmings makes the setting, Hawaii, a major part of the story. Once I realized this, I also noticed Hemmings hinting at racial tensions, so I decided to research the history of racial tension in Hawaii, specifically between Americans and Native Hawaiians. I quickly found that as diverse as Hawaii is, it still has a lot of problems with discrimination between groups of people.
My process for the multi-genre paper was basically to brainstorm what I could do with different genres and how I could use them, then narrow my list of genres down and make drafts of them. I ended up with a poem from two-viewpoints, which I think works well with the two-sided conflict I researched. The two voices are of a native hawaiian and of a newer Hawaiian, according to a native (In other words, the type of person that old Hawaiians think white Hawaiians are). I also wrote a newspaper article, in which I made up interviews with various Hawaiians, showing the tension and anger surrounding issues of land ownership and the real reasons behind these issues. Then, a map of Hawaii, with one half showing the modern tourist and the other showing old Hawaii and the royal family (I found that this is a hawaii which many natives want to go back to). I created Matt King’s desk, which shows the internal struggle of someone who is torn between loyalty to his ancestors /old Hawaii and love for his cousins, who want the money from the land sale. I designed his desk, which has pro/ con lists, reminders, notes, and a printed newspaper article, all projections of his internal struggle. This is significant because his struggle is representative of the struggle between old Hawaiians and the current culture of Hawaii. After I finished all of my genres and came up with my golden thread, I added one more genre, an obituary for Princess Kaiulani, so I would have something from the past too.
My golden thread was the phrase “last hope” and the image of Princess Kaiulani. This phrase refers to the last princess of Hawaii, Princess Kaiulani, whom Hawaiian’s called “our last hope.” I realized that Matt King is also a last hope, because he holds the last piece of untouched land that belonged to the Hawaiian monarchy. His decision to keep and protect the land brings hope to the people of Hawaii that their islands still belong to them. King also begins to reduce racial and socio-economic tensions, bringing Hawaii together, when he decides that preserving a bit of old Hawaii is more important than making money.
Healy Crews
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