The Case of George Brown: Material Culture and the Missionary Enterprise

Authors

  • Holly Bray

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/cons24725

Abstract

This article analyzes the complex and controversial role of material culture in the missionary endeavour of the South Pacific, using as a case study George Brown. Brown’s contributions to the European academic community as well as to his Methodist mission offer scholars an exceptional example of how extensive object collection blurs the line between missionary and ethnographer. With reference to detailed sources written by Brown himself, it is argued that his role as a missionary did not limit Brown’s credibility in an academic environment hungry for first-hand accounts of indigenous culture. Furthermore, this role should enhance (not taint) studies of Brown’s legacy; a collection of objects and texts such as his denies a clear categorization as a missionary or as an ethnographer. The context of George Brown’s collecting therefore merits a “recontextualization” of sorts, as the stigma surrounding the missionary enterprise often obscures the historical value of such prized research.

Downloads

How to Cite

Bray, H. (2015). The Case of George Brown: Material Culture and the Missionary Enterprise. Constellations, 6(2). https://doi.org/10.29173/cons24725

Issue

Section

Articles