
Surrounded by Spirits: Hauntings of Identity in Waimea Summer by John Dominis Holt
Author(s) -
Alexander Casey
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
dzieciństwo, literatura i kultura
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2657-9510
DOI - 10.32798/dlk.354
Subject(s) - queer , narrative , identity (music) , indigenous , agency (philosophy) , history , gender studies , sodomy , subject (documents) , sociology , art , literature , homosexuality , aesthetics , social science , ecology , biology , library science , computer science
In 1976, John Dominis Holt published what would be considered the first novel by a Kanaka Maoli [Native Hawaiian] author in English, Waimea Summer. This coming-of-age narrative set in 1930’s Hawai‘i follows fourteen-year-old Mark Hull, a half White, half Kanaka Maoli boy who experiences a series of hauntings on his uncle’s farm, all the while grappling with a burgeoning queer identity and conflicted cultural loyalties. In the post American-occupied Hawai‘i, the teachings of Christian missionaries and anti-sodomy laws have all but eradicated the aikāne [homosexual] relationships practiced by the ali‘i [royals] of Marks’ genealogy, and yet the boy’s queer desires refuse to die. In this paper, the novel is interpreted through Laura Westengard’s theory of the queer Gothic, in which concepts of the American nuclear heterosexual family are challenged by the burgeoning past, thus returning the narrative and agency to the queer Indigenous subject.