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‘ I am Still a Young Girl if I Want’: Relational Personhood and Individual Autonomy in the T robriand I slands
Author(s) -
Lepani Katherine
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
oceania
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.356
H-Index - 25
eISSN - 1834-4461
pISSN - 0029-8077
DOI - 10.1002/ocea.5073
Subject(s) - personhood , human sexuality , agency (philosophy) , autonomy , sociology , gender studies , sociality , salience (neuroscience) , narrative , situated , posthumanism , social psychology , psychology , epistemology , social science , political science , ecology , philosophy , linguistics , artificial intelligence , computer science , law , cognitive psychology , biology
In the T robriand Islands of P apua N ew G uinea, sexuality is valued as a positive expression of relational personhood, registering the efficacy of consensual and pleasurable practice in producing and maintaining social relations. The power of sexuality to demonstrate individual and collective capacity and potential holds particular salience for unmarried young people. This paper draws on my ethnographic research on culture and HIV in the Trobriands to address perduring questions about the locus of individual autonomy in M elanesian sociality, where relational personhood shapes identity and modes of exchange in the moral economy. I focus on the gendered agency of youth sexuality, including the use of kwaiwaga , or love magic, in exercising and controlling desire. The narrative identities of two young women provide the lens through which questions of agency are explored, revealing how the autonomous mind, nanola , is central to understanding the embodiment of social relations, how the power of love magic transfers agency from one individual to another, and how individual assertions and acts are ultimately expressions of situated relationality.