

Author: Scott Michael W.
Publisher: Routledge Ltd
ISSN: 0275-7206
Source: History and Anthropology, Vol.23, Iss.1, 2012-03, pp. : 115-148
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Abstract
Since civil tension disrupted Solomon Islands between 1998 and 2003, the Arosi of Makira have elaborated discourses according to which their island contains a secret and preternaturally powerful subterranean army base. These discourses have clear antecedents in Maasina Rule, a post-World War II socio-political movement sometimes analysed as a “cargo cult”. Offering an alternative interpretation, I compare Arosi discourses about the Makiran underground to the Matter of Britain as represented in Geoffrey of Monmouth's
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