Abstract
This article asks what might hold together the promises of a future open to indigenous organization and self-governance in postcolonial Hawai‘i. In what ways can past violence and lingering structural inequalities be integrated into contemporary politics and law? I argue that the grand projects of recognition and apology fail to resolve historical violence in forms acceptable to many native Hawaiians because of the constraints of the legal form in both alternatives, a legality that has served as a tool of colonization and subordination. Rather than turn away from the legal form, however, I explore a third philosophical alternative, plasticity, that comprehends the ways in which form destabilizes and reintegrates itself, grasping what Catherine Malabou has called “the interplay between form and itself.” I explore plasticity philosophically and in the context of ongoing plastic political experiments designed to privilege indigenous ontology as a means of reengaging with a different postcolonial legality.
For the health of a single individual, a people, and a culture the unhistorical and the historical are equally essential.
In 1993, one hundred years after the deposition of Queen Lili‘uokalani and 105 years after Hawai‘i’s colonization by the USA, Congress and President Clinton apologized “to Native Hawaiians on behalf of the people of the United States for the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii on January 17, 1893 with the participation of agents and citizens of the United States, and the deprivation of the rights of Native Hawaiians to self-determination.” 3 Seven years later and to the present time, in response to court rulings jeopardizing entitlements to native Hawaiians and nullifying the premise of the Apology, 4 Hawai‘i’s congressional delegation proposed to secure these endangered rights with the “Akaka Bill,” a law recognizing the aboriginal people of Hawai‘i and restoring some aspects of self-governance. In this article, I ask what lies beyond the law and its repeatedly empty promises for Kanaka Hawai‘i (native Hawaiians). If there is to be reconciliation through “acknowledg[ment of] the ramifications of the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawaii and … reconciliation efforts between the United States and the Native Hawaiian people” as the Apology urged, what difference can law now make to the failure of law to uphold the Hawaiian nation? The answer I pursue here is that reconciliation and apology, acts and conditions that have been formulated as exceptions to the norms of law, may reproduce the violence inherent in colonial encounters that have, throughout time, instituted law in exceptional ways. Reconciliation that reengages with the form of law, but acknowledges the real, ontological grounds of indigenous distinction, may better serve its political ends.
I pursue this argument in three parts, an homage to Hegel to whom theories of reconciliation implicitly and explicitly return, using Hawai‘i and other Pacific countries as my primary illustrations of these efforts. In the first section, I examine critical theoretical reactions to reconciliation efforts that argue against the limited material transfers that might make reconciliation something more than an appealing political project for settlers in the post-colony. I next examine the theory of apology that attempts to escape the Hegelian system in which law returns as the promise of reconciliation. Finally, I explore a third alternative, one that follows Catherine Malabou’s rethinking of Hegelian recognition as “plasticity” in which form transmutes into new ways of being. 5 Plasticity reveals the dynamics of self-transformation latent within every ontological difference. I use this concept as a potential avenue for practicing reconciliation in and on indigenous terms. As I claim no standing to speak for indigenous ontology or knowledge, my task here is to work within Western theory, to demonstrate its limits, and to point towards places where indigenous ontologies must now supplement and replace Western imaginations.
I. Reconciliation
Law’s promise has nearly always exceeded its delivery for Aboriginal peoples. In Hawai‘i, the importation of Western law by the ruling ali‘i – absorbed in whole cloth from the state of Massachusetts in 1840 – came in the wake of French, British, and American warships hungry to swallow Hawaiian territory, the transformative social and political consequences of a growing missionary presence, a wild sexual economy servicing merchant sailors, and the instability brought by the printing press and near-universal Hawaiian literacy. The promise of sovereignty through law was complicated. Foremost, it committed the Hawaiian kingdom to many values and agents of imperialism. Law also brought with it the instruments for privatizing property and exploiting labor. At a more ideological level, subordination to the law by the ali‘i bought into the Enlightenment promise that law could deliver to erstwhile “savages” 6 the bodily norms and practices that would lend a patina of civilization and a subsequent claim to international respect for national autonomy and self-determination. 7 Despite this effort to embrace a foreign law and abide its forms, legality failed to save the nation. The American-led overthrow of the Queen extinguished autonomy as it rewrote its laws.
Today, Hawaiians are asked to again support the law, in remembrance of this tragedy, as a way of saving their nationhood. Yet, as many Hawaiian reactions to these reconciliation efforts have made clear, the contorted forms demanded by the law are eerily reminiscent of past failures of the law to protect the nation through demands for conformity. 8 For many who have turned away from reconciliation efforts through the Apology and the Akaka Bill, rejection has been aimed at the timing of recognition, the legal fiction of an Indian nation through which recognition must constitutionally take place, the harms which are to be apologized for, the English language in which recognition is to be made and the forums in which justice is to be sought. 9 170 years after the uncrating of the first lawbooks in Hawai‘i, the question of what form reconciliation must take is foremost.
Some forms of recognition are, perhaps ironically, imposed. Without the pending new beginning of the Akaka Bill – the promise that this time, with formal legal recognition, with a legal allotment of self-governance, reconciliation will finally be realized – the state has initiated some reparative efforts involving recognition. Hawaiian values are extolled in preambles to legislation, explicitly including Hawaiians into an official and commercially-relevant cosmopolitanism and multiculturalism. A formal commitment to protect Hawai‘i’s delicate ecology, for example, names a balanced ancient Hawaiian stewardship of the land as its justification. 10 And Hawaiian common and constitutional law acknowledges enduring customary rights, including access to otherwise private land. 11 These all designate Hawaiians as the original occupants of the Islands with distinctive claims based on a proto-sovereignty. But is this recognition ultimately conciliatory? Can it transcend settler interests and do more than legitimate liberal policy projects such as environmentalism and ideals of social and racial diversity packaged and sold to tourists, for example? 12 Does it ultimately resolve the distinctive parts, histories, and worlds of postcolonial lands into a realized ideal of reciprocity? 13
Despite an increasingly global interest in recognition among many indigenous peoples, critical and postcolonial theorists have voiced important skepticisms about what such a politics may deliver, arguing that the form in which recognition is conceptualized is bound by deep-seated structural inequalities and the power relations they signal. 14 Recognition’s promise of reconciliation depends upon undercutting a liberal notion of the self-posited subject who can stand autonomously of colonial power relations and their legacies, or it must negotiate hybridity and what Bhabha has influentially called a “third space” constituted by those relations. 15 Hegel’s dialectic of recognition seems to offer this possibility to some. 16 Relations of recognition become “constitutive of subjectivity: one becomes an individual subject only in virtue of recognizing, and being recognized by another subject.” 17 For Hegel, this dialectic that begins in the desire for recognition between master and slave, and progresses onwards through an unhappy consciousness mediated by religion, and finally to absolute spirit, resolves the primary contradictions of dependency and hierarchy in a statist manner. Charles Taylor, addressing Quebecois and Indigenous demands for a distinctive Canadian identity with particularized rights, has argued that Hegel’s formula can also be used to resolve public sphere concerns for the equal dignity of all citizens and the desire of each to be “recognized for his or her unique identity,” a difference that has romantic, collective dimensions as well. Ultimately, “the potential for forming and defining one’s own identity, as an individual, and also as a culture” 18 for Taylor prevaricates on the individual and collectivist dimensions.
Critics have offered three kinds of rebuttals to Taylor, many hinging on his collectivist reading of Hegel. As these rebuttals are powerful and mature, my goal here is simply to take inventory. Taylor’s suggestion to build collective harmony on the supposition that “cultures that have provided the horizon of meaning for large numbers of human beings, of diverse characters and temperaments, over a long period of time … are almost certain to have something that deserves our admiration and respect”
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nonetheless preserves rather than overcomes difference. As Brenna Bhandar notes, The address or petition for recognition, when made by a cultural community, is on the basis of a difference that has to already be in existence if it is to be recognized. This means that in the act of a community representing itself as having a particular cultural identity, the fluidity, contingency and movement that is actually characteristic of practices and “traditions” in cultural communities is captured … Taylor … doesn’t seem to distinguish between the relative “artificiality” of identity as it is represented within a liberal-legal paradigm, and what we really are about, which is a set of fluid, changing, fragmented and non-unitary subjectivities.
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What Taylor’s liberal fixing of community difference implies is a limited form of tolerance adjudicated against some already-accepted norm for judgment. This is illustrated in Hawai‘i in the State Constitution where the state binds itself to protect all rights, customarily and traditionally exercised for subsistence, cultural and religious purposes and possessed by ahupua‘a [ancient district] tenants who are descendants of native Hawaiians who inhabited the Hawaiian Islands prior to 1778, subject to the right of the State to regulate such rights.
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These “frozen rights” 22 are allowed only according to official interpretation of ancient practices and limited in other ways the state sees fit. 23
A second dynamic of recognition amplifies the first. The Hegelian framework of recognition is intersubjective whereas recognition today is mediated by state institutions with subordination and not recognition as their purpose. 24 Deployment of official knowledge about indigenous peoples, the arbitrary use of cut-off dates, and control over the timing of recognition – all continue to subordinate. The dynamics of nationalism, concern for sovereign recognition by other nations, and tactical political considerations may all supersede any meaningful conciliation. For this reason, many critical approaches radicalize Taylor’s reliance on Fanon’s postcolonial theory, suggesting that Fanon’s emphasis upon the essential nature of subaltern struggle – especially his inclusion of violent struggle – challenges institutional power while it transforms the subjective dimensions of colonization in a way that no state institution can muster. 25 Fanon’s transformative politics points beyond the state, nation, and sovereignty.
A third, trenchant critique of recognition theory and practice is that political recognition substitutes for redistribution, 26 leaving the deep legacy of colonial inequality unchanged or minimally affected. This problem certainly involves an unwillingness to realize the role of property in recognition, a property that is characteristic of the subject as well as quantifiable. 27 Borrowing from Bataille and Derrida, Bhandar calls this a “restricted economy of recognition” 28 in which property relations of any sort are not placed in question. In the illustrative case of Hawai‘i, 29 the question of the provenance of the “ceded” lands – whether they will be controlled by the state acting as trust guardian for Hawaiians, assimilated into the state’s collective assets, or used as a resource base for a proto-Hawaiian government – is, while likely a major motivator for settling the question of recognition, nonetheless not open to negotiation within the Akaka Bill. 30 Nor are the consequences of recognition for this question clear in any explicit manner; some argue that the Akaka Bill will effect a significant transfer of the ceded lands to Hawaiians in the name of reconciliation, 31 while others have voiced deep skepticism that land transfer can be secured in this manner. 32
In summary, these critical approaches to reconciliation are skeptical of the sufficiency of the rights and identities states are willing to recognize in the interest of resolving colonial disparities. Instead, as Patchen Markell suggests, The discourse of liberal multiculturalism in contemporary North America and Europe leverages gains for excluded and marginalized groups by indulging the demands of states (and their normative citizens) for recognition of their sovereignty, now understood in terms of the capacity to observe, manage, and contain difference.
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As Hawaiian scholar and activist Haunani K. Trask expresses this sentiment in reevaluating law, Modern Hawai‘i, like its colonial parent the United States, is a settler society; that is, Hawai‘i is a society in which the indigenous culture and people have been murdered, suppressed, or marginalized for the benefit of settlers who now dominate our islands. In settler societies, the issue of civil rights is primarily an issue about how to protect settlers against each other and against the state. Injustices done against Native people, such as genocide, land dispossession, language banning, family disintegration, and cultural exploitation, are not part of this intrasettler discussion and are therefore not within the parameters of civil rights.
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Trask’s and Markell’s arguments apprehend the actions of those Hawaiians who have turned from state efforts at recognition, and allow us to see that their complaints about form are not to be dismissed as merely symbolic, as inessential “legal fictions,” or as partial understandings of historical change, all of which have been voiced in opposition to the Akaka Bill. 35 Rather, form crystalizes the transformative capacity of change. In the most common understanding of Hegel’s thought, form expresses the idea of the aufhebung, the always-already, the concept of simultaneous annihilation and incorporation of difference through which colonial antagonisms yield acceptable new beginnings. This is the concept propounded in spirit yet in other names by advocates of the Akaka Bill. These supporters’ efforts to remedy the steady erosion of native Hawaiian rights, the persistent antagonism of conservative federal courts, a lingering powerlessness, are based in an already-remedial move: legal recognition, an always-already form. But Hegel is not Hawaiian.
II. Apology
If rights are “bound by recognition,” reflecting an internal Hegelian logic suited mostly to settler interests, might an apology open history to something new, something more assimilable to Hawaiian and other indigenous realities? Might apology transcend form that has limited the appeal of recognition or overcome form in some messianic manner that welcomes the indigenous Other?
Apologies for settler colonial violence are “in the air” in settler societies in the Pacific, perhaps because they seem to offer recognition a new foundation that calls upon the goodwill of secure political majorities nonetheless skittish of legal losses signaled by the Mabo decision in Australia, increasing human rights commitments, or threats to the status quo by relatively conservative courts in the United States. 36 As Jennifer Lawn argues, “Apologies are unusually powerful and dynamic modes of utterance [having] the potential to produce discursive effects in the strong sense of the term, not merely describing but actually inscribing new modalities of social responsibility and group identity.” 37 This discursive promise of the apology, as Derrida understands it, aims at forgiveness but orients itself beyond the law, and beyond the Hegelian always-already.
The concept of forgiveness – or the unforgivable – which is often put forward in all these discourses [of repentance and apology], and in their commentary, remains heterogeneous to the judiciary or penal dimension that determines both the time of prescription or the imprescriptibility of the crimes. That is, unless the non-juridical dimension of forgiveness, and of the unforgivable – there where it suspends and interrupts the usual order of law – has not in fact come to inscribe itself, inscribe its interruption in the law itself.
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The risky interruption of law and the suspicion of politics are inherent in one current of Derridean thought, although it is a second current, an ethical and mostly Lévinasian concern for the sacred, that most influences scholarship on Apologies. 39 This religious character is critical to the act of apology importantly for what it can call upon in terms of remembrance and redemption long caught up in questions of colonial sovereignty. As Jonathan Boyarin has recently argued, native peoples have never been disentangled from Euro-American concerns over Jewish difference within an expansive Christendom. 40
Jewish and Christian ethics both help explain the political significance of the apology. Danielle Celermajer relies on Lévinas’s Jewish ethics to show the “highly ambiguous verdict” 41 of the apology: “an archetypical act of human freedom, including the freedom to alter one’s identity across time,” the freedom of the indigenous to refuse the apology, and the freedom from a totalizing politics suspending the immediate, face-to-face character of the act of contrition. In this manner, Celermajer projects a rupture in the Hegelian dialectic of recognition, a rending that the apology can effect.
To be successful, apology must work politically to resolve temporal discontinuities (bringing the truth of the past into the present context while opening to a new future). But it must also make a material difference in the lives of those whom it is addressing. If this material difference is only reflected in law, then Lévinas’ lifelong anti-Hegelian caution – one shared with Derrida – that political language may distort the ethics of the face to face encounter – is well placed here. A political apology raises an essential question: who does an apology for colonial violence address? Those descendants who still suffer the aftermath of colonial violence, or the political subjects whose sense of sovereign entitlement is wounded by unabsolved guilt? Lévinas’ ethics would suggest that it must be both, the apology providing a “fraternal mode of proximity” 42 that does not collapse ethics into politics.
For some who have favorably assessed the 2008 Apology of the Commonwealth of Australia to its indigenous peoples, several mechanisms worked to translate and transform the dynamics of guilt, many embedded in the idioms of Christian redemption 43 and its utility for a new sovereignty.
The language of reconciliation, the exercise of sovereignty in the mode of contrition, and the re-imagining of a new identity on the basis of a hope for unity for the people cannot be entirely severed from Christian moorings … The apology was a re-visioning of the national imaginary and a reshaping of national identity – a “new beginning.”
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This new origin is one that is above and before the law, a recollection of sovereignty distinguishable from the Judaic sense of a people of the law, 45 more aligned with Christian notions of a universalism beyond particularism. 46
The Australian Apology focused on the forced removal of Indigenous children from their homes, a policy that was not a crime in its time. This avoided a direct legal connotation to the apology, but signaled that something beyond the dyadic nature of criminal and community was at stake. Situated beyond the law, the apology drew upon a sense of collective shame, one that could be reconciled with sovereignty. According to Sara Ahmed, shame can bring ‘‘the nation’’ into existence as a felt community. To acknowledge wrongdoing means to enter into shame; the ‘‘we’’ is shamed by its recognition that it has committed ‘‘acts and omissions,’’ which have caused pain, hurt and loss for indigenous others.
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Shame calls the nation through a sovereign imagination. Those who hear the call of apology must see themselves as already always members of a nation “insofar as their allegiance has already been given to the nation, and they can be subject to its address.” 48 As a sovereign, this community can act to expiate wrongs as an act of exception.
The sovereign alone can assuage the moral or spiritual excess which the law can merely ignore or contain by judicial punishment. The tension between shame and sovereignty is thus resolved by reconciliation. It is only grace that overcomes original sin.
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The reference to original sin deploys apology as an abasement of the sovereign, analogizing the crucifixion. Yet the exceptional quality of the apology – like the crucifixion – also renders the meaning both “evanescent and immaterial.” 50 Apology may escape making a material difference in both its evanescence and in its recall of the religious-material basis of early colonial settlement that always relegated indigenous subjects to a place removed from, but called by, civilization, community and law. In its threatening distance from law, apology also risks capture in the institutional matrix that surrounds material interests – the legal rights to property, the hegemonic promise of entitlements, and the legal obstructions to recognized difference: all structures left untouched in the theory of recognition explored in the first section of this article. These all played a crucial role in the 1993 Apology in Hawai‘i. In the discussion that follows, I am interested in showing the problems of capture in Hawai‘i. This follows Derrida’s admonition that “the language of forgiveness, at the service of determined finalities, was anything but pure and disinterested. As always in the field of politics.” 51
The Hawai‘i Apology Act, like the Australian, raises in question the sovereign rather than legal nature of harm. The Apology has a vast set of “whereas” clauses that establish the historical involvement of the United States in what President Cleveland noted at the time (1893) to be an “act of war committed with the participation of a diplomatic representative of the United States and without authority of Congress” through which “the government of a peaceful and friendly people was overthrown.” The 1993 repetition of this language overturned the findings of a 1983 commission
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and reaffirmed Cleveland’s understanding in new words: “the indigenous Hawaiian people never directly relinquished their claims to their inherent sovereignty as a people or over their national lands to the United States, either through their monarchy or through a plebiscite or referendum.” That some indigenous sovereignty remained was evidenced by the central text of the Apology: The Congress … apologizes to Native Hawaiians on behalf of the people of the United States for the overthrow of the Kingdom of Hawai‘i on January 17, 1893 with the participation of agents and citizens of the United States, and the deprivation of the rights of Native Hawaiians to self-determination.
The Apology’s reference to inherent sovereignty, to rights, and to land helped renew the indigenous sovereignty movement in Hawai‘i. 53 And it was cited approvingly in Congressional hearings held in 2000 in Honolulu by some Kanaka Hawai‘i who read the Act to morally support the Akaka Bill. For others, the idea of the Apology was correct, but the Act duly criticized for calling inappropriately for a legal form of reconciliation. “The 1993 U.S. apology bill asked for reconciliation and offered the next move to the Hawaiian people, not to this Congress. This bill is deja vu 1898 all over again.” 54 Similarly, others saw the Apology bill opening a space for making reconciliation pono, a Hawaiian term for justice with no necessary legal implications. This was important because there was no immediate material consequence to the Apology: “the denying of our fishing and hunting rights, etcetera … As I see it there is no return of the lands, no repayment of back rents and apology for what?” 55 Yet for others, by focusing on one wrong – the overthrow of the Queen – rather than the many wrongs and continued petty violence of colonialism and imperialism, the only logic of justice was the recognition of the never-extinguished Kingdom. “The Apology Bill encourages this reconciliation. But in order to do that, there must be restoration,” expressed Kaui Amsterdam. 56
The hopes for escape into the Kingdom, restoration of rights long suppressed, and return of stolen land, all reveal the ambivalence of the Apology, its limited capacity to call into question the form of contemporary relations and to settle the form of their transformation. The Act called upon a sovereign community to acknowledge and overcome past wrong, but it simultaneously pointed towards sovereign institutions, highly invested in contemporary dynamics of power. The Apology “recognizes and commends efforts of reconciliation initiated by the State of Hawai‘i and the United Church of Christ with Native Hawaiians,” two institutions with highly ambivalent statuses. The state’s very existence and legitimacy is predicated on the legality of the overthrow of the Queen; its commendation for efforts at reconciliation, especially in the context of those Kanaka who still revere their Kingdom, already closes what an apology could keep open in the name of reconciliation and justice: the form of dominant government in the islands. The reference to the United Church of Christ does something similar. As in other apologies, it explicitly frames the Christian dynamics of reconciliation and forgiveness. But where this religious theme is at least theoretically open to difference and redemption, the Apology names the church that first established the missions that converted the Hawaiian ali‘i in an effort to civilize and make Hawaiians fit for legal subjectivity and international sovereignty.
If the Apology does not escape the gravitational pull of this civilizational narrative, it is also captured by its commitment to a prelapsarian myth. Claire Moon has argued that reconciliation as narrative scripts the terms on which reconciliation is to take place restrictively, by presupposing the idea of ‘‘return’’ as its point of closure. In contrast, reading reconciliation as a metaphor opens a space for politics due to its indeterminacy, which enables the terms upon which reconciliation is negotiated to be contested.
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In pointing to the overthrow of the Kingdom, metaphorical openness is penned by the idea of a return, both in the case where Kanaka Hawai‘i see only the literal Kingdom still existing, a past that has a presence and a future; or where opponents of reconciliation can point to a time under the Kingdom when many were citizens, Hawaiians as well as settlers. Prelapsarian time serves both, but does not account for the realities today of vast inequality where Hawaiians lead the chart of homelessness, incarceration, and ill health. 58
The vast power of sovereign institutions makes capture of the messianic apologetic gesture more likely. Despite the overwhelming dismissal of the Akaka Bill by Hawaiians testifying during the only hearings ever held in Hawai‘i in 2000, the Bill has been introduced annually ever since. And the Supreme Court has ignored the Apology in Rice v. Cayetano (2000) that overturned the Hawaiian restriction on voting for the board of a state agency designed to serve Hawaiians entitled to a fraction of the profits from ceded lands. 59 The Court has more recently stripped the preamble from the Apology in Hawai‘i v. OHA. 60 That case overturned a Hawai‘i Supreme Court ruling that cited the Apology in support of ruling that a Maui parcel of the ceded lands could not be sold by the state pending resolution of “unrelinquished” native Hawaiian land claims. The Supreme Court ruled that the Apology was not the proper form in which Congress can create substantive rights. In addition, the Court ruled that the 37 whereas clauses that discussed the historical intervention of the United States in Hawaiian affairs were of no legal significance. Finally, the Court said that there could be no cloud on land title involving Hawaiian issues. If apologies work to bring side by side a mechanical time preserving “the truth of the violation, ensuring that the tears once shed are held as inviolable” and a “time of fecundity [that] makes possible a radical transformation of identity and relationship, giving meaning to finite freedom” 61 then this case stripped the legal significance of violation, toppling any promise that future time might hold.
III. Plastic Ontologies
The mutability of beings is what opens a future in the absence of any openness of the world.
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What might hold together the promises of a future open to indigenous organization and self-governance and the immediate recognition of contemporary conditions? In what ways can past violence and structural inequalities be integrated into contemporary politics? I have argued in the earlier parts of this article that the grand projects of recognition and apology fail to resolve historical violence in forms acceptable to many native Hawaiians. Law seems ever present in the process and imagination of both alternatives, a law that has ambivalently sanctioned the desire of many settlers to erase indigenous difference (to “exterminate all the brutes” in a more palatable fashion) and to use indigenous presence as a means to pursue social, economic and land-use policy.
In this final section, I sketch theoretical and practical projects not yet imagined as a means towards advancing reconciliation in practical terms. My effort is to reframe the critical concern over law and its forms that has been voiced by some Hawaiian activists who no longer abide law’s eternal promise of peace and self-determination at the perpetual cost of conformity. Rather than look for a way out of law’s entanglements, I argue that the lack of handy exits from law’s labyrinth need not require messianic moves forward nor atavistic returns to earlier legal contexts, nor must it be mired in intersubjective negotiations over cultural difference. 63 I underscore this argument using Western philosophy that takes another turn towards Hegel through the creative work of Catherine Malabou, as well as demonstrate where indigenous theory and critical settler theory may meaningfully take over. In brief, I understand the return to Hegel through Malabou’s concept of plasticity to build a form of recognition on the uncertain and evolving confluence of malleable ontologies rather than the ossified and enduring categories of law.
I embed the following discussion in the important claim for political ontologies recognized by those who have criticized contemporary forms of recognition, and found wanting the metaphysical alternatives embedded in the messianic project of the apology. 64 Markell has called an ontology an “implicit or explicit interpretation of the fundamental conditions of life in the social and political world, the kinds of things that exist there and the range of possibilities that it bears.” 65 He has also defended ontology from the claims that it makes necessary what are really contingent historical formations (a criticism stemming from a more traditional way of reading the limitations of the Hegelian system) by identifying the ways in which ontology is also dependent on epistemology, a learning, that can reveal its contingent dimensions. 66 In this manner, a political ontology may illuminate the necessities of indigenous identities and the potentialities in indigenous existence without resorting to a petrified anthropology or a politics of (in)authenticity.
Catherine Malabou has developed the Hegelian concept of plasticity to address this fusion of the ontological and epistemological. Her reading of Hegel’s Phenomenology suggests a desire for transformation at the heart of recognition, 67 an active reaching for change that animates plasticity. Plasticity accounts for the capacity of each organism to give and receive form, a mutability or metamorphosis that is historically real (in the Hegelian sense) to the extent that it is a privileged type of materiality, a mode of apprehension, and a manner of change, dimensions revealed in many contemporary phenomena such as neurobiology, 68 capitalist organization, and the transformation of identity. 69 Addressing these many philosophical dimensions, plasticity constitutes a “motor scheme” 70 that leaps beyond (a reading of) the “always already” system of the dialectic – the “tight loop which envelops everything – all exteriority, all alterity, all surprise” 71 – revealing that the Hegelian system never has been closed to the future, to what is to come. 72 Plasticity grasps the “the interplay between form and itself.” 73 This metamorphosis is immanent within ontology and metaphysics, requiring no “Other” of religion or law, no transcendence whatsoever: “Alterity enchanted by disenchantment: alterity must be sought out everywhere that there is metamorphosis, in all the folds of metaphysics, as the fabulous unconscious of ontology.” 74
Two major dimensions of plasticity orient us beyond the messianic realm of the apology, and the limitations of the Hegelian system of recognition. 75 First, Malabou stresses a new materialism, one in which the persistence of form engages a new understanding of time, one that is both linear and open to the voir venir, that seeing or glimpse of what is to come: “the structure of anticipation through which subjectivity projects itself in advance of itself, and thereby participates in the process of its own determination.” 76 In this manner, the subject cannot “seize the moment” since time leaps – without a messianic impulse – beyond the boundaries of any simple teleology; instead, the subject must see itself becoming, metamorphosing. Second, this materialist subject embedded in its material form must be presumed to be a reader, transforming itself through its grasp; “Reality and [its] mode of apprehension” cannot be divorced, in the same way that the verb “to grasp” connotes both the seizure of a subject and its understanding. 77 Time is a record of these movements back into past conditions and forward into future possibilities, suggesting that what is inappropriately messianic is both the hope for future transcendence without plasticity (e.g., the declarative securing of Hawaiian sovereignty), and a return to the past (e.g., a restoration of the Hawaiian Kingdom on account of systemic error or wrong).
These dimensions can be read into Malabou’s discussion of cosmopolitanism, with consequences for this discussion. Cosmopolitanism, as she examines it, is a response to the “economic determination of globalism,” 78 the critical problem of imagining a way beyond imperialism and the international relations of sovereignty. As she points out, Lévinas and Derrida both stressed an ethical moment of hospitality in cosmopolitanism, a non-plastic movement that distinguished the “trace” of the encounter with the Other from the form of existence. Temporally, the trace returns to the past, a reminder of the first experience of the other. 79 Spatially, this political moment is not here. “The encounter with the other, the response to the moral injunction, would always have to occur ‘elsewhere,’ to the extent that the very movement of the encounter in general, which Lévinas calls ‘metaphysics,’ is a move toward ‘somewhere else.’” 80 This move towards the ethical and political exterior, this attempt to “flee,” is not plastic. Nor, does Malabou suggest, is it sufficiently critical. The emphasis on the trace as inconvertible to form – packed within the idea of hospitality propounded by Lévinas and Derrida – is nothing more than a Marxist notion of fetish operating beyond the circulation and exchange of economic values, a pretense that an apology might disrupt capitalist globalization, for example.
On the face of it, the fetish always occurs outside the operation of exchange, outside the market. From then on, when otherness is fetishized by its resistance to plasticity, when hospitality continues to be thought as the ‘‘counter’’ to plasticity or, in other words, against form, it is no longer possible to distinguish cosmopolitanism rigorously from hypercapitalism.
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Plasticity, with its emphasis on convertibility, would seek alternatively to conceptualize this trace as form.
Deconstruction would have found, in plasticity, its most faithful expression, the conceptual hôte – both host and guest – most worthy of the concept of hospitality. For is not plastic the substitutable material par excellence? Can it not take the place of every thing, can it not deconstruct every idea of authenticity, is it not always engaged in the process of its own disappearance? Is it not always beyond its very own form because it can change?
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Of course, there are limits to the notion of hospitality read onto the imperial situation. Who is the guest and who the host? Since colonization is imposed on a “host” culture, why does the “guest” arrange the apologies and perform the reconciliations for the host? Malabou’s sense that host and guest are mixed, one and the same, suggests that disentanglement of these positions is strategically uncertain. Nonetheless, her position should not be read as an ethical and political disengagement. Her stress on the materialist persistence of form implies, in postcolonial situations, much more than that which could ever be envisioned by the Hegelian West, and must include distinctive indigenous ontologies as well. In this sense, plasticity as a motor force should not be read as a Western imperialism, conceptualizing others in purely post-Hegelian terms. Malabou invites us to understand alterity as less a call to “interiorize” or assimilate difference, or to deny the mourning for what is replaced by globalization; instead, we must “presuppose[] another plasticity, as a non-integrative suppleness.” 83 In this adjacent plasticity there is an incommensurability of form that can open up into a real history.
To state that nothing is unconvertible amounts to claiming the philosophical necessity of the thought of a new materialism, which does not believe in the ‘‘formless’’ and implies the vision of a malleable real that challenges the conception of time as a purely messianic process. It means that we can sometimes decide about the future … which means that there is actually something to do with it, in the sense in which Marx says that men make their own history.
84
Malabou’s reading of change and transformation without fleeing the historical epoch or the historical self, suggests another way of conceptualizing the ethical gestures bound to the concerns for reconciliation and apology in response to imperial violence against indigenous peoples. The persistent transformation of form proposes that recognition, to be real, must be to some large degree, a recognition or reading of the self. “The subject, in every case, is conceived as a self-interpretation, a place of synthesis of its identity with and difference from itself.” 85 Such a reading of the self may involve, as well, a grasping of multiple temporalities that infuse the self. It also may depend on less transcendental forms of recognition, those not anchored to law and legal rights, or the dominant imagination of sovereignty. Finally, in the context of imperialism that it intends to disrupt and transform, plasticity implies the vitality of the international dimension from which readings of self and identity gain perspective.
How can we apply these ideas to the ontologies of indigenous peoples? In what ways are present forms of being, deeply distorted by the overwhelming annihilatory power of settler societies, past imperialist violence, and the always-incoming tides of globalization able to transform themselves in ways responsive to Western ideals of justice or indigenous ideas of what is right (in Hawaiian, what is pono)? Mark Rifkin has approached these forms through a notion of practical sovereignty, what he calls a bare habitance that examines form outside of the threatening yet distant tendrils of legal authority. 86 What law and sovereign discourses have done, according to Rifkin, is to distort essential dynamics of indigenous being. For example, American Indians (who are recognized under the American Constitution) may occupy reservations but cannot exercise full authority within these territories, and may claim traditional rights predating American law that are preserved by treaties, yet must abandon these “rights” subsequent to changes in recognition governed by that dominant law. The foundational legal language of “denominated domestic dependent nation” 87 renders them neither foreign nor assimilable. In addition, law and sovereignty have both contributed to the foregrounding of the individual body and its excesses that make indigenous peoples appear unfit without modification for the respect and recognition that are due “civilized” individuals. 88 What aboriginals require, for Rifkin, is a restored and renewed emphasis on territoriality, collectivity, and the legitimacy of sovereignty granted within international relations.
Apart from a rich and resurgent cultural presence – one valorized for its contribution to the state’s tourist industry, and increasingly, as a basis on which to pursue some ecological policies – Hawaiians seem to occupy a particularly difficult theoretical position from which to extend Rifkin’s notion of bare habitance. Native Hawaiians have no constitutional claims to Indian status which makes distinctions between natives and subsequent settlers an uncertain if not inapprehensible legal question. 89 Native Hawaiians lack reservations, making questions of territoriality and its linkage to sovereignty just as nebulous. Finally, Hawaiians have no established political authority from which to voice collective demands.
Nonetheless, there is reason to suspect that these dimensions of territoriality, collectivity, and legitimacy are more than transcendental subjects constituted a priori. Malabou has offered an ontological reading of Hegel that is organized around humanity, God and the philosopher, three sites that are not, in her reading, necessary lock-steps in the unfolding of Spirit, but rather “sites where subjectivity forms itself.” 90 I am not trying to tuck indigenous ontopolitics into a forced parallel with these great moments in the unfolding of Western philosophy. Instead, I am suggesting that there are potential analogues to the idea of plastic sites where subjectivity forms itself that are caught up in the spaces and times of indigeneity – an identity that is simultaneously local and shared globally with other indigenous peoples, 91 that makes distinctive claims to being of and on the land, and that understands itself as a people as much as a collection of individuals. These sites implicate the legitimate claims for territoriality, and they meld modern time (the simultaneous time of other indigenous groups fighting distinct but similar battles against settler colonies) with ancient genealogies linked to time immemorial, a time always before the law. 92
In what follows, I provisionally sketch two sites relevant to Kanaka Hawai‘i in which plastic ontological transformations are occurring. Following Malabou’s arguments for the persistence and metamorphosis of form, I am interested in locating places where the fluidity of identity leaks beyond the liberal forms of rights that resist the acknowledgement of transformation. In a conclusion I ask what these may tell us about the place of law in efforts to account for past injustices.
IV. Metamorphosis
In native Hawaiian theory (and many other indigenous theories), animals play a significant cosmological and political role, even though animals lack a traditional linguistic and cultural category. 93 Sharks and owls, landforms and even plants can be human ancestors, and because some bodies can change shapes – because they are plastic – it is possible to create an ancestor who swims in the ocean, lives on land, or flies in the sky. This is decidedly a non-Western ontology. 94
The state of Hawai‘i has increasingly recognized some aspects of this particular role that non-human others play in Hawaiian cosmology. It has premised some of its efforts to regulate shark finning and shark tours, for example, on the state’s fiduciary protection of this special historical relationship. 95 This stands in stark contrast with the state’s earlier approaches to shark management. In 1958, several months prior to Hawaiian statehood, the territorial government responded to a fatal shark bite off O‘ahu by authorizing the mass killing of sharks. The Billy Weaver Shark Control Program, eponymously named for the victim of this attack, was one of the fledgling state’s first legislative acts, appropriating and administering $300,000 for the slaughter of many hundreds of near-shore sharks. 96 What differences for native Hawaiians have a more scientifically based and culturally “sensitive” set of management policies brought?
Longstanding Native Hawaiian stories about sharks, pigs, and other significant beings, many published in local news articles in the Hawaiian language during the mid-nineteenth century, provide a record of a deeply divergent ontology not easily reconciled with state-sanctioned efforts to distinguish and control nature through the eradication of sharks, or the creation of spatial and economic zones in which humans will have to refrain from intentional contact with sharks. The existence of these stories does not imply a Hawaiian cultural authenticity nor does it bind indigenous thought to its pre-Western-contact forms in the way that a regime of recognition might. Rather, it acknowledges the growing cultural literacy among Hawaiians that allows for a plastic transformation of subjectivity, something evident in contemporary Hawaiian scholarship as well as cultural practice and political life today. Stories of interspecies mutation may aid this political transformation by encouraging what Malabou would call a plastic reading: an openness to alter the self by engaging with oral and written texts about sharks, pigs, and other beings, and the metamorphoses – allegorized in these stories – that link these beings together.
I will draw a couple of ideas that come from stories of metamorphosis. One involves sharks. As the state attempts to ban shark feeding tours on O‘ahu, it acknowledges native Hawaiian values, including the idea that sharks are (sometimes) ‘aumākua (or guardian ancestors) to some Hawaiians, 97 and claims these values as supportive of the state’s efforts to regulate its territory through ecological-scientific management. Yet, some Hawaiians do feed sharks, and not for the same economic reasons that tour boat operators do. Feeding the flesh of a deceased family member to a shark could transform that human into a shark who would then responsibly watch over family members, particularly in the ocean spaces where that shark would roam.
Many Hawaiians continue to honor their family ‘aumākua, despite over a century of imposed English language and relentless attempts at forced assimilation. By the late 20th century, few Kanaka could speak Hawaiian and many aspects of their culture seemed to be lost. Since the 1970s, however, Hawaiian language studies have been resurgent and many everyday practices have been reinvigorated including surfing, hula, and the feeding of sharks. 98
The social engagement with sharks is not dependent on a benign view of their behavior or their scientifically understood place within a natural ecology; it does not recapitulate the distinctions between nature and culture on which the state’s environmental policies depend. Nor is it an impenetrable sign of difference named in legislative preambles regarding respect for “native Hawaiian practitioners,” a difference that seems, even in its solicitation, to call into question the adequacy of the veil of civilization and the animalistic “savagery” lurking thereunder. Rather, feeding sharks as ‘aumākua and as deity re-imagines the humanistic boundaries of what has been recognized within colonial encounters, 99 and it helps to reclaim the waters beyond the powers of the state, to invest these fluid territories with new aspects of sovereignty no longer tied to a civilized veneer. Swimming with finned ancestors allows some Hawaiians to experience a genealogical belonging historically denied them by the state.
Pig hunting provides another example. Hunting pigs is a cultural activity with significant cultural roots since Western contact. The pig god Kamapua‘a holds a privileged place in Hawaiian stories as a troublemaker who can change shape, dodging and escaping authority by turning himself into a fish, or other metamorphic camouflage. 100 Feral pigs today are seen as problematic for the scientific-ecological state for this same type of unnerving mobility. Their rambling through the forests is understood by scientists to upset the ecosystem, limiting natural diversity by endangering native species. At the same time, many Hawaiians see their own survival threatened by efforts to eradicate or strictly control feral pigs, and they have questioned the ahistorical logic by which scientists determine the baseline of Hawaiian ecological balance. Pigs were intentionally brought by Polynesian voyagers who settled Hawai‘i; why isn’t it now imperialist to say that they are not part of the ecological balance? The denial of historical political economy is more galling when the state supports its ecological legislation by invoking Hawaiian values, implicitly calling upon the romantic idea that Hawaiians are natural inspirations for scientific management. 101
This ahistorical attitude has ambivalent consequences for some Hawaiians. The ecological threat of pigs has been used by some Hawaiians to gain access to military bases in sanctioned efforts to enforce environmental laws protecting endangered species, opening lands otherwise off-limits. For hunters, chasing wandering pigs provides access to land without recognition of property boundaries in the same way that Kamapua‘a toyed with authority in written stories. Interestingly, many of the trails crossing the islands once used by precontact Hawaiians are today maintained by pigs who keep them free of undergrowth, a reminder of a prior, but now suppressed, sovereign control over territory maintained by non-human beings. For hunters, they assure access to food and to land bounded by the territorially-indifferent pig whose wanderings are resonant of Kamapua‘a’s exploits. For environmentalists, pigs provide opportunities to protect these places from exploding shells as well as from pig wallows. In these ways, the wandering of pigs generates small sovereign tactics by Kanaka Hawai‘i including accessing land for sustenance. Pigs, and those who hunt and exclude them, help to challenge the shapes and meaning of postcolonial property boundaries: a contemporary plasticity of form.
The plasticity of living beings and landforms found in Hawaiian lore and cultural practice are both inspiration and analogy to the plastic kinds of learning and play that offer theoretical alternatives to postcolonial legality. Pre-contact ways of organizing access to land and sea once promoted a local political economy; one form, called ahupua‘a – a term that tellingly includes the word for pig – marked territories on each island in which all inhabitants therein had rights to gather from the ocean reefs to the upland forests. These zones can still be imagined today to plastically reassemble the spaces and economies of modern Hawai‘i. These imagined worlds stemming from the practiced recognition of non-human others have exciting consequences for rethinking indigenous territory, collectivity, and legitimacy.
V. Settler ontologies
Plasticity is a concept also allowing us to think some aspects of settler self-transformation to the benefit of indigenous peoples, a metamorphosis that does not require nor depend upon the state and its official sense of time or place of priority. Asian settler colonialism (ASC) is an academic project with active roots among some scholars in Hawai‘i. 102 It is designed to rupture the myth of multicultural citizenship in Hawai‘i that is premised upon an earlier historical struggle with the colonial state. The multi-ethnic labor struggles that emerged in reaction to the ethnically-segregated sugar plantations combined with the heroism of returned WW II veterans of Japanese ancestry to forge a conception of citizenship stressing republican and middle class virtues of hard work and military bravery. 103 Under the banners of the Democratic Party and civil rights, this ideology successfully displaced a notion of citizenship privileging genealogies tied to colonial missionaries, the plantation legacies of early landed interests, and ties to Hawaiian royalty and the Hawaiian Kingdom, a schema that excluded Asian laborers and their descendants. While the Democratic Party legacy has been progressive for many who were subordinated under the older schema – particularly those Asians who emerged into the middle class and were committed to development under the aegis of globalized capitalism – it only incorporated native Hawaiians through its republican multiculturalism and its commitments to civil rights.
ASC is an attempt to rethink this multiculturalism by examining the relationship between Asian settler identities and native Hawaiian claims in the interest of transforming subjectivities.
The story is a two-fold recovery of Asian settlers’ colonial complicity and the transition from a U.S.-centric industrial agricultural political economy to the … dynamics of neoliberal globalization, both of which suggest what may fall out of a narrative restricted to settler debt and indigenous expense. Yet, in its certain trajectories, there is little room to recover singularities under new names. They remain unintelligible and un-cohered with the certain parameters of settler colonialism.
104
Apart from the commitments to reposition Asian settlers within the historical trajectory of imperialism, ASC simultaneously re-imagines a geopolitical space that has positioned Hawai‘i at the confluence of the East and West. “Once inserted into an ‘East’ and ‘West’ geopolitical frame, Hawai‘i becomes defined within a continuum between implicitly ‘Oriental’ and ‘Occidental’ constructs that negate the subjectivity of Pacific peoples.” 105
Plastically changing Asian identities and their cartographies in an effort to account for historical marginality and class trajectories is designed to renew indigenous histories and open a future not occluded by the necessity of global capitalism and domestic development. It is, simultaneously, a way for activists to embrace indigenous struggles, not as their own, not just in an effort to build Asian solidarity without privileging the middle class, but as a way of rebuilding a future for Hawai‘i that honors the primacy of indigenous economic and cultural differences.
What this metamorphosis of identity means for Asian settlers and others is unsettling. Where multicultural ideas of citizenship, previously established by settlers of Japanese ancestry, assume ethnic and racial differences to be cultural rather than political categories, the privileging of indigenous history puts into question the basis for non-Hawaiian citizenship altogether. Indigeneity emerges not as race with that category’s imperialist history, nor as respected ethnic cultural difference, but rather as a viable historical agent for whom Asian allies can play a supportive but not determinate role. No longer able to fit or support the liberal American ideal of assimilation for which civil rights have played a signal character, Asian identity assumes its complex postcolonial character, benefiting from the conquest of the Hawaiian kingdom for which it had no responsibility, and furthering liberal capitalist development that has marginalized native communities. ASC continues this agency in another chapter. Asian settler identities in this alternative frame are not eliminated as much as intentionally annihilated and reformed, plastically rearranged in an effort to open political space and disrupt a progressive temporality.
My point in this much too brief synopsis of a rich and rapidly expanding academic project is to demonstrate the fluidity of identity and the grasping and annealing of this form through an active reading of systemic structures of capitalism, citizenship, and law. In ASC, Asian identities are treated as ontologies, situated amid other ontologies, developing through self-reflection, criticism, and the compelling demands of other peoples. The recognition of indigenous peoples by ASC in an effort to transform settler subjectivity seems in some ways less puissant than public efforts at reconciliation or apology, perhaps because it is located outside the apparatuses of the state and concentrates itself on more particular ethnic experiences. But this project also seems imbued with more potential to rethink the past and open the future in ways that leave space for the historical projects of indigenous peoples.
VI. Conclusion
Approaching form through the concept of plasticity brings us back to a new Hegel. The metaphors of healing, understanding historical change, and reconciling differences don’t change, but their meanings do. Plasticity orients us towards new ideas about law’s power to heal postcolonial wrongs that law has also perpetuated. It urges us to listen to indigenous peoples’ dismissal of the forms in which law comes to deliver its persistent promises of peace and sovereignty at the expense of normative conformity. Plasticity also leads to the expectation that efforts to heal the violence of postcolonial societies will not come from the disappearance of indigeneity. On the contrary, there will be more incommensurate identities based around divergent claims to belonging, recalled through alternative ontologies embedded in alternative texts, languages, and everyday practices. Plasticity may also show us the necessity embedded in forms that Malabou philosophically reveals to be always material: the needs for collective self-development, territory that facilitates individual and collective reproduction, and the legitimacy to exist within a world where other indigenous peoples can thrive. This is a world of small but important projects of becoming, less focused on the imperative of law and right to account for these differences, to regulate them. For law has never been able to adequately do so.
Perhaps it is useful to think of another form in which to contemplate the violence of colonial societies against their indigenous inhabitants. Rather than apology or reconciliation, perhaps we can use Malabou’s notion of an “affirmation of the impossible,” a new globalization of the world that appears as this welcoming of the other which does not put him to death, which does not embalm him in advance before even having met him. Only this welcome, the condition of a non-prescriptive memory which does not prejudge the destiny of the originary trace of the other in us, can guide the march of the new internationality and of supranational political and legal institutions delivered from the obsession of normal mourning and its banality.
106
Affirming the impossible is expressed through its counterpart of mourning the possible, a psychic process that Freud reveals to plastically conserve the form of that which is mourned.
107
The mourning of the possible, in the double sense of the genitive, can only be the conservation of the possible itself which does not reify it in an image or a phantasm. Thus conserved, the possible remains forever possible, and to this extent the not having happened is also the resource for that which can arrive, the resource of all faith in the future, of all confidence in another becoming of the world.
108
This confidence in another becoming is not the assurance of the destruction of form and the elimination of law. It is, significantly, the political poise that stems from knowing the inherent plasticity of form, its annihilation and reconstruction, that makes the unhistorical and the historical equally essential.
Footnotes
1.
I thank Brenna Bhandar, Renisa Mawani, Sherene Razack, Noenoe Silva and two anonymous reviewers and the editors of this journal for their helpful comments on earlier drafts of this article. I retain any responsibility for errors of fact and judgment.
2.
Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche, On the Use and Abuse of History for Life (NuVision Publications, LLC, 2007), 11.
3.
Public Law 103-150, 103d Congress, enacted 23 November 1993.
4.
See, for instance, Rice v. Cayetano 528 US 495 (2000), Hawai‘i v. Office of Hawaiian Affairs 129 S. Ct. 1436 (2009).
5.
Catherine Malabou, The Future of Hegel: Plasticity, Temporality, and Dialectic (New York: Routledge, 2005).
6.
In a now well-rehearsed quotation that illustrates the many significations of the native Hawaiian as savage, Hiram Bingham, an early missionary to Hawai‘i, wrote in 1849, “On the 31st of March, a considerable number of the natives came off to our vessel, from the shores of Kohala, to dispose of their little articles of barter, and to look at the strangers … the appearance of destitution, degradation, and barbarism, among the chattering, and almost naked savages, whose heads and feet, and much of their sunburnt swarthy skins, were bare, was appalling. Some of our number, with gushing tears, turned away from the spectacle. Others with firmer nerve continued their gaze, but were ready to exclaim, “Can these be human beings! How dark and comfortless their state of mind and heart! How imminent the danger to the immortal soul, shrouded in this deep pagan gloom. Can such beings be civilized?” Hiram Bingham, A residence of twenty-one years in the Sandwich Islands (H. Huntington, 1849), 81.
7.
Sally Engle Merry, Colonizing Hawai‘i: The Cultural Power of Law (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2000); Peter Fitzpatrick, “Passions Out of Place: Law, Incommensurability and Resistance,” in Laws of the Postcolonial, ed. Eve Darian-Smith and Peter Fitzpatrick (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1999), 39–60; See, generally, Elizabeth A. Povinelli, “What’s Love Got to Do with It? The Race of Freedom and the Drag of Descent,” Social Analysis 49, no. 2 (Summer): 173–81; Ann Laura Stoler, Race and the education of desire : Foucault’s History of sexuality and the colonial order of things (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1995); S. Carter, The Importance of Being Monogamous: Marriage and Nation Building in Western Canada to 1915 (University of Alberta Pubn Services, 2008).
8.
Neal Milner and Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, “Feeble Echoes of the Heart: A Postcolonial Legal Struggle in Hawai‘i,” Law, Culture and the Humanities 4, no. 2 (2008): 224–47; Melody Kapilialoha MacKenzie, “Native Hawaiians and the Law: Struggling with the He‘e,” Asian-Pacific Law & Policy Journal 7 (2006): 79; J. Kehaulani Kauanui, “Court of the Conquerer Writes Another Legal Fiction,” Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, April 20, 2009,
.
9.
Neal Milner and Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, “Feeble Echoes of the Heart.” See also Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, “The Persistence of the Indian: Legal Recognition of Native Hawaiians and the Opportunity of the Other,” New Political Science 33, no. 1 (2011).
10.
See Hawai‘i HB 2705, “Relating to Sharks,” 2010. The preamble to this proposed legislation links a commitment to maintain ecological balance to the “great cultural, historical and spiritual significance [of sharks] for many native Hawaiians, native Hawaiian practitioners, and others who value the Hawaiian culture.”
11.
In Public Access Shoreline Hawai‘i v. Hawai‘i County Planning Commission, 79 Haw. 425, 447, the Hawai‘i Supreme Court wrote, “Our examination of the relevant legal developments in Hawaiian history leads us to the conclusion that the western concept of exclusivity is not universally applicable in Hawai’i. … In other words, the issuance of a Hawaiian land patent confirmed a limited property interest as compared with typical land patents governed by western concepts of property.” The Court then limited the right through notions of appropriate indigenous culture, an idea that I pursue later in the article. See also Pele Defense Fund v. Paty, 73 Haw. 578, 837 P.2d 1247 (1992), cert. denied, 507 U.S. 918, 113 S.Ct. 1277, 122 L.Ed. 2d. 671 (1993). See also Jocelyn B Garovoy, “Ua Koe Ke Kuleana O Na Kanaka (Reserving the Rights of Native Tenants): Integrating Kulenana Rights and Land Trust Priorities in Hawaii,” Harvard Environmental Law Review 29 (2005): 523.
12.
Jocelyn Linnekin, “Consuming Cultures: Tourism and the Commoditization of Cultural Identity in the Island Pacific,” in Tourism, ethnicity, and the state in Asian and Pacific societies, ed. Michel Picard and Robert Everett Wood (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1997), 215–50.
13.
Hegel writes, “The word of reconciliation is the existing spirit which immediately intuits in its opposite the pure knowledge of itself as the universal essence, intuits it in the pure knowledge of itself as individuality existing absolutely inwardly – a reciprocal recognition which is absolute spirit.” Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Phenomenology of spirit, trans. Terry Pinkard (Oxford University Press, 2008), Para. 670.
14.
Patchen Markell, Bound by recognition (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2003); Elizabeth A. Povinelli, The Cunning of Recognition: Indigenous Alterities and the Making of Australian Multiculturalism, Politics, history, and culture (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2002); Brenna Bhandar, “Re-Covering the Limits of Recognition: The Politics of Difference and Decolonisation in John Borrows Recovering Canada: The Resurgence of Indigenous Law,” Australian Feminist Law Journal 27 (2007): 125–55. See, generally, the arguments that recognition is riven by incompatible needs and desires within some postcolonial scholarship: Gyan Prakash, Another reason: science and the imagination of modern India (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1999); Homi K. Bhabha, The location of culture (London, New York: Routledge, 1994); Sankaran Krishna, Globalization and postcolonialism: Hegemony and resistance in the twenty-first century (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2009), 89–98.
15.
The third space is an unconscious relation introducing “an ambivalence in the act of interpretation” stemming primarily from temporal dislocations. Homi K. Bhabha, The location of culture, 36.
16.
Charles Taylor, Multiculturalism and “The politics of recognition”: an essay, ed. Amy Gutmann (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1992).
17.
Nancy Fraser and Axel Honneth, Redistribution or recognition?: A political-philosophical exchange (London, New York: Verso, 2003); quoted in Glen S. Coulthard, “Subjects of Empire: Indigenous Peoples and the ‘Politics of Recognition’ in Canada,” Contemporary Political Theory 6, no. 4 (2007): 437–60.
18.
Charles Taylor, Multiculturalism and “The politics of recognition”: an essay, 42.
19.
Id. at 72–3.
20.
Brenna Bhandar, “Re-Covering the Limits of Recognition,” 138.
21.
Haw. Const., Art. XII, § 7, italics mine.
22.
John Borrows, “Frozen Rights in Canada: Constitutional Interpretation and the Trickster,” American Indian Law Review 22, no. 1 (1997): 37–64.
23.
See J. Tully, “Aboriginal peoples: negotiating reconciliation,” Canadian Politics 3 (1999).
24.
Patchen Markell, Bound by recognition; Glen S. Coulthard, “Subjects of Empire.”
25.
Glen S. Coulthard, “Subjects of Empire”; Brenna Bhandar, “Re-Covering the Limits of Recognition.”
26.
Nancy Fraser and Axel Honneth, Redistribution or recognition?: A political-philosophical exchange.
27.
Brenna Bhandar, “Re-Covering the Limits of Recognition,” 141.
28.
Brenna Bhandar, “Re-Covering the Limits of Recognition.” Reference is to J. Derrida, “From restricted to general economy: A Hegelianism without reserve,” in Writing and difference, 1978, 251–77.
29.
See Eric Yamamoto and Ashley Kaiao Obrey, “Reframing Redress: A ‘Social Healing Through Justice’ Approach to United States-Native Hawaiian and Japan-Ainu Reconciliation Initiatives,” Asian American Law Journal 16, no. 1 (2009): 5; J. Kēhaulani Kauanui, “Precarious Positions: Native Hawaiians and US Federal Recognition,” The Contemporary Pacific 17, no. 1 (2005): 1–27.
30.
Stuart Minor Benjamin, “Equal Protection and the Special Relationship: The Case of Native Hawaiians,” Yale Law Journal 106 (1997): 537; Jon Van Dyke, Who owns the Crown lands of Hawaii? (University of Hawaii Press, 2008).
31.
Brian Duus, “Reconciliation between the United States and Native Hawaiians: The Duty of the United States to Recognize a Native Hawaiian Nation and Settle the Ceded Lands Dispute,” Asian-Pacific Law & Policy Journal 4 (2003): 469.
32.
Annmarie Liermann, “Seeking Sovereignty: The Akaka Bill and the Case for the Inclusion of Hawaiians in Federal Native American Policy,” Santa Clara Law Review 41 (2001): 509; Rebecca Tsosie, “Engaging the Spirit of Racial Healing within Critical Race Theory: An Exercise in Transformative Thought,” Michigan Journal of Race & Law 11 (2006): 33.
33.
Patchen Markell, “Ontology, Recognition, and Politics: A Reply,” Polity 38, no. 1 (2006): 28. See generally, the inherent dangers of subsuming recognition to ontology in Lois McNay, Against recognition (Cambridge: Polity, 2008), 8 and ff.
34.
Haunani-Kay Trask, From a native daughter: colonialism and sovereignty in Hawai‘i (Monroe, ME: Common Courage Press, 1993), 25.
35.
See Neal Milner and Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, “Feeble Echoes of the Heart.”
36.
Danielle Celermajer, “Apology and the Possibility of Ethical Politics,” Journal of Cultural and Religious Theory 9, no. 1 (2008): 14–34; Michael Fagenblat, “The Apology, the Secular and the Theologico–Political,” Dialogue 27 (2008): 16–32; Michael Phillips, “Aboriginal reconciliation as religious politics: Secularisation in Australia,” Australian Journal of Political Science 40 (March 2005): 111–24; Michael R. Marrus, “Official Apologies and the Quest for Historical Justice,” Journal of Human Rights 6, no. 1 (Jan.–Mar. 2007): 75–105.
37.
Jennifer Lawn, “Settler Society and Postcolonial Apologies in Australia and New Zealand,” Sites: a journal of social anthropology and cultural studies 5, no. 1 (October 30, 2008): 21.
38.
Jacques Derrida, “To forgive: The unforgivable and the imprescriptible,” in Questioning god, ed. J. D. Caputo, M. Dooley, and M. J. Scanlon (Bloomington: University of Indiana Press, 2001), 25.
39.
Catherine Kellogg writes, “rather than pursuing Derrida’s treatment of the speculative, the Anglo-American reception of deconstruction instead thematizes its ethicopolitical dimension in terms of the sacred. Thus, the past fifteen years have witnessed what might be identified as a new wave in the Anglo-American reception of Derrida’s work: the religious wave … Importantly, the unassimilable ‘other’ is here understood, not in terms of the ‘event,’ but in terms of the Lévinasian infinite, the face of God. On this view, the ‘other’ is no longer understood in terms of an interminable ‘difference.’ Rather, it is understood in terms of absolute alterity.” Catherine M. Kellogg, Law’s Trace: From Hegel to Derrida (Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 2010), 14.
40.
Jonathan Boyarin, The Unconverted Self: Jews, Indians, and the Identity of Christian Europe (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2009).
41.
Danielle Celermajer, “Apology and the Possibility of Ethical Politics,” 16. For a discussion of Lévinas in the context of indigenous struggles in Hawai‘i, see Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, “‘Subjectivity is a Citizen’: Representation, Recognition, and the Deconstruction of Civil Rights,” Studies in Law, Politics and Society 28 (2003).
42.
Danielle Celermajer, “Apology and the Possibility of Ethical Politics,” 31.
43.
Jacques Derrida, On cosmopolitanism and forgiveness, trans. M. Dooley and M. Hughes (London: Routledge, 2001), 31. Derrida writes, “The globalization of forgiveness resembles an immense scene of confession in progress, thus a virtually Christian convulsion-conversion-confession, a process of Christianization which has no more need for the Christian Church.”
44.
Michael Fagenblat, “The Apology, the Secular and the Theologico–Political,” 16. For a broad discussion of Levinas’s politics, see Annabel Herzog, “Is Liberalism ‘All we Need’? Levinas’s Politics of Surplus,” Political Theory 30, no. 2 (2002): 204–27.
45.
Jonathan Boyarin, “Another Abraham: Jewishness and the Law of the Father,” Yale Journal of Law & the Humanities 9 (1997): 345.
46.
Alain Badiou, Saint Paul: The Foundation of Universalism, 1st ed. (Stanford University Press, 2003); See also J. L. Nancy, Dis-enclosure: the deconstruction of Christianity, trans. B. Bergo, G. Malenfant, et al. (New York: Fordham University Press, 2008).
47.
Sara Ahmed, The Cultural Politics of Emotion (New York: Routledge, 2004), 101.
48.
Id. at 102.
49.
Michael Fagenblat, “The Apology, the Secular and the Theologico–Political,” 25.
50.
Ibid., 28.
51.
Jacques Derrida, On cosmopolitanism and forgiveness, 31.
52.
The Native Hawaiians Study Commission of 1983 found insufficient complicity of the United States in the overthrow of the Queen to recommend reparations. “As an ethical or moral matter, Congress should not provide for native Hawaiians to receive compensation either for loss of land or of sovereignty. Reviewing the situation generally, including the historical changes in Hawaii’s land laws and constitution before 1893, the Hawaiian political climate that led to the overthrow, the lack of authorized involvement by the United States, and the apparent limited role of United States forces in the overthrow, the Commission found that on an ethical or moral basis, native Hawaiians should not receive reparations.”
53.
Dennis Pu‘uhonua Kanahele, “Clandestine Manipulation Toward Genocide,” Arizona State Law Journal 34 (2002): 63.
54.
Statement of Kai‘opua Fyfe, Joint Hearing before the Committee on Indian Affairs United States Senate and the Committee on Resources United States House of Representatives, August 28, 2000, Honolulu, Hawai‘i. Serial No. 106-98, Part 1, p. 110. 1898 was the date of annexation.
55.
Statement of Kawika Kutcher, Joint Hearing before the Committee on Indian Affairs United States Senate and the Committee on Resources United States House of Representatives, August 28, 2000, Honolulu, Hawai‘i. Serial No. 106-98, Part 1, p. 111.
56.
Statement of Kaui Amsterdam, Joint Hearing before the Committee on Indian Affairs United States Senate and the Committee on Resources United States House of Representatives, August 30, 2000, Honolulu, Hawai‘i. Serial No. 106-98, Part 3, p. 138.
57.
Claire Moon, “Prelapsarian State: Forgiveness and Reconciliation in Transitional Justice,” International Journal for the Semiotics of Law 17, no. 2 (June 23, 2004): 187.
58.
59.
In the state’s brief for that case, the Justices were admonished to do “the decent thing” in light of the Apology, an extra-legal morality that was not heard.
60.
Hawaii, et al., Petitioners v. Office of Hawaiian Affairs, et al., 129 S. Ct. 1436; 173 L. Ed. 2d 333; 2009 U.S. LEXIS 2494 (2009).
61.
Danielle Celermajer, “Apology and the Possibility of Ethical Politics,” 23.
62.
Catherine Malabou, Plasticity at the Dusk of Writing: Dialectic, Destruction, Deconstruction (New York: Columbia University Press, 2010), 78.
63.
James Tully, Strange multiplicity : constitutionalism in an age of diversity, The John Robert Seeley lectures (Cambridge, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995), 13 and ff.; Homi K. Bhabha, The location of culture, 38 and ff.
64.
Brenna Bhandar, “Re-Covering the Limits of Recognition.” (See quotation at fn 13, infra); Patchen Markell, “Ontology, Recognition, and Politics”; Mark Rifkin, “Indigenizing Agamben: Rethinking Sovereignty in Light of the ‘Peculiar’ Status of Native Peoples,” Cultural Critique 73 (2009): 88–124. See generally the arguments about “ontopolitics” in William E. Connolly, The ethos of pluralization, Borderlines ; v. 1. (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1995); Michael Dillon, “Another Justice,” Political Theory 27, no. 2 (April 1, 1999): 155–75. Connolly writes (pp 1–2): “an ontopolitical stance, for instance, might strive to articulate a law or design set into the very order of things .…Political interpretation is ontopolitical: its fundamental presumptions fix possibilities, distribute explanatory elements, generate parameters within which an ethic is elaborated, and center (or decenter) assessments of identity, legitimacy, and responsibility.”
65.
Patchen Markell, “Ontology, Recognition, and Politics,” 195, fn. 7.
66.
Antonio Y. Vázquez-Arroyo, “Re-cognizing Recognition: A Commentary on Patchen Markell’s Bound by Recognition,” Polity 38, no. 1 (2006): 4–12. Markell writes in opposition to the idea that the validity of philosophy is already known in advance, “in the Phenomenology, each claim on the part of the subject to know is simultaneously also an interpretation of what sorts of things there are to be known and a taking-up of a certain existential posture in relation to the world thus interpreted … structures of social and political subordination could be understood to function for their beneficiaries as forms of self-insulation from the force of their own practical finitude – but this, importantly, is by no means the same as purporting to prove that such structures necessarily exist, or that they can be causally or constitutively explained by direct appeal to an independently established ontological axiom. This is an engaged, interpretive approach to ontological issues, which folds ontology back into history and practice rather than serving as its ground, and which stakes the persuasiveness of an ontological perspective on its capacity to illuminate a range of different concrete situations.” Patchen Markell, “Ontology, Recognition, and Politics,” 29–30.
67.
Brenna Bhandar and Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, “Review of Plasticity at the Dusk of Writing: Dialectic, Destruction and Deconstruction by Catherine Malabou, 2010,” Theory & Event 14, no. 1 (2011).
68.
Catherine Malabou, What Should We Do with Our Brain?, 1st ed. (New York: Fordham University Press, 2008).
69.
Malabou writes, “Plasticity is the systematic law of the deconstructed real, an organizing mode of the real that comes after metaphysics and today allows itself to be discovered in every domain of human activity. Today, new metamorphic occurrences appear that impose themselves at the level of social and economic organization, at the level of ‘‘genre’’ or of the sexual identity of individuals, that show that the privileged regime of change is the continued implosion of form, by which form revises and reforms itself continually.” Catherine Malabou, “The End of Writing? Grammatology and Plasticity,” The European Legacy 12, no. 4 (2007): 439.
70.
Malabou writes, “a motor scheme is a kind of tool capable of appropriating the largest quantity of energy and information from the text of an epoch.” Ibid., 437.
71.
Catherine Malabou, “The Future of Hegel: Plasticity, Temporality, Dialectic,” trans. Lisabeth During, Hypatia 15, no. 4 (2000): 199.
72.
Malabou argues that a Derridean emphasis on writing serves as a prior motor scheme, one now superseded by plasticity. “Derrida describes here the semantic enlargement of the concept of writing, not as an arbitrary philosophical decision but as an event, the appearance of a new order, starting from the pregnancy of the motifs of program, information, or code. It is only on the basis of this programmatic organization of the real as it is liable to come to the awareness of an era that writing was able to constitute itself as a philosophical motor scheme. Yet today we must acknowledge that the power of the linguistic-graphic scheme is diminishing and that it has entered a twilight for some time already. It now seems that plasticity is slowly but surely establishing itself as the paradigmatic figure of organization in general.” Catherine Malabou, Plasticity at the Dusk of Writing, 59.
73.
Malabou writes, “I am investing the concept of plasticity which, in Hegel, means less the interplay between matter and form than the interplay between form and itself, that is, the relationship between form and form. In the Phenomenology of Spirit, Hegel shows that the subject is plastic in the sense that she or he is able to receive form (passivity) and to give form (activity). I certainly do not intend to show that these modes of being of the subject represent the masculine/feminine relationship. I am interested in showing that this relationship between form and itself is not founded on a difference. The two modes of being of the subject are not different from one another, but each of them transforms itself into the other. With plasticity, we are not facing a pre-given difference, but a process of metamorphosis. In other words, the Hegelian subjects trans-subjects itself constantly. Its form is its matter.” Noelle Vahanian, “A Conversation with Catherine Malabou,” Journal for Cultural and Religious Theory 9, no. 1 (2008): 4.
74.
Catherine Malabou, Plasticity at the Dusk of Writing, 43. Malabou writes, “I don’t believe in transcendence at all. I don’t believe in something like the absolute Other, or in any kind of transcendence or openness to the other. So in this sense, as a Hegelian, I am quite convinced with Žižek that we’re living in some kind of closed organizational structure, and that society is the main closed structure. But at the same time, this structure is plastic. So it means that inside of it, we have all kinds of possibilities to wiggle and escape from the rigidity of the structure.” Noelle Vahanian, “A Conversation with Catherine Malabou,” 10.
75.
I am indebted to some of this organization of the argument to private correspondence with Prof. Brenna Bhandar.
76.
Catherine Malabou, “The Future of Hegel,” 213.
77.
Catherine Malabou, “The Future of Hegel,’’ 5.
78.
Catherine Malabou, Plasticity at the Dusk of Writing, 72; See also Catherine Malabou, “History and the Process of Mourning in Hegel and Freud,” Radical Philosophy (2001): 15–20. Malabou’s understanding of cosmopolitanism is more radical than many others in that it includes a conception of radically divergent ontologies, including temporalities. Where Ulrich Beck can argue that cosmopolitanism expresses “a new rule of globalized entangled modernities that highlight the urgency of demands of this world risk society” (Ulrich Beck, “The Cosmopolitan Society and Its Enemies,” Theory Culture Society 19, no. 1–2 (April 1, 2002): 21), Malabou might point out that this “urgency of demands” is not universally agreed upon. Where Waldron’s idea of cosmopolitanism is forced to eliminate distinguished claims for indigenous peoples based on the imperative of what might be called commensurable incommensurabilities (J. Waldron, “Indigeneity-First Peoples and Last Occupancy,” NZJPIL 1 (2003): 55; Jeremy Waldron, “Settlement, Return and the Supersession Thesis,” Theoretical Inquiries in Law 5 (2004): 237), Malabou need not be read in this fashion.
79.
Malabou writes, “If cosmopolitanism cannot merge with globalization, it is because far from originating in a substantial self-sufficiency, cosmopolitanism on the contrary responds in its organization to a visit, the very first visit of the other person. The transcendental memory of this first visit destines cosmopolitanism to be a nonfinite opening. For Lévinas and Derrida alike, this mark carries the name trace. Cosmopolitanism responds in its structure to the ethical injunction of the past as the fact of the other’s passage, that is, as the ‘trace’.” Catherine Malabou, Plasticity at the Dusk of Writing, 73.
80.
Ibid., 66.
81.
Ibid., 77.
82.
Ibid., 74.
83.
Catherine Malabou, “History and the Process of Mourning in Hegel and Freud,” 20. Malabou’s ideas of supple and metamorphic form blunts some philosophical and political arguments against recognition generally. See, for example, Lois McNay, Against recognition, 8 and ff.
84.
Catherine Malabou, Plasticity at the Dusk of Writing, 77.
85.
Malabou, preface to Félix Ravaisson, Of Habit (London: Continuum, 2008), xiv. Nietzsche writes sympathetically, “I mean by plastic power the capacity to develop out of oneself in one’s own way, to transform and incorporate into oneself what is past and foreign, to heal wounds, to replace what has been lost, to recreate broken moulds.” Nietzsche, On the Uses and Disadvantages of History for Life, quoted in Catherine Malabou, “History and the Process of Mourning in Hegel and Freud,” 19.
86.
Rifkin’s theorizing is situated in opposition to that of Giorgio Agamben, and his concept of bare habitance is designed to rectify and extend Agamben’s idea of bare life. I do not explore here Agamben’s argument about the legal zones of indifference into which Rifkin is peering because Agamben himself never extends his theory to the plight of indigenous peoples.
87.
Cherokee Nation v. the State of Georgia, 1831.
88.
See the arguments surrounding casinos and fishing rights. Eve Darian-Smith, New Capitalists: Issues of Law, Politics and Identity Surrounding Casino Gaming on Native American Land (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing Co Inc, 2003); Jeffrey R. Dudas, The Cultivation of Resentment: Treaty Rights and the New Right (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2008).
89.
See the debates over this issue within the 6–3 Supreme Court decision Rice v. Cayetano, 528 U.S. 495 (U.S. 2000).
90.
Catherine Malabou, “The Future of Hegel,” 215. She continues, “The[se sites] are the plastic instances where the three great moments of self-determination – the Greek, the modern, and that of absolute knowledge – give themselves the ‘form’ of moments; in other words, where they create their specific temporality. From this perspective, the notion of ‘step’ loses its evaluative content, and only signifies the break or interruption – the operation of breaking – in the self-formation of time itself.”
91.
Linda Tuhiwai Smith, Decolonizing methodologies: research and indigenous peoples (London, New York: Zed Books; University of Otago Press; distributed in the USA exclusively by St Martin’s Press, 1999).
92.
Malabou suggests that Hegel’s distinct Greek and Christian (Kantian) notions of time work together to give a history to expectation, or voir venir. This has implications for reading Hegel, but also, I suggest, for reading the indigenous situation. Malabou writes, “Reading Hegel amounts to finding oneself in two times at once: the process that unfolds is both retrospective and prospective. In the present time in which reading takes place, the reader is drawn to a double expectation: waiting for what is to come (according to a thought which is linear), while presupposing that the outcome has already arrived (according to the teleological ruse).” Catherine Malabou, “The Future of Hegel,” 212. The diversity of times according to which one may read indigenous futures suggests that the efforts to force reconciliation and apology at particular times chosen by the settler state may not match the times chosen by those to be recognized, reconciled, or asked forgiveness. See Neal Milner and Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, “Feeble Echoes of the Heart.”
93.
There is no word for animal in pre-contact Hawaiian. For other studies of human and non-human animal relations in indigenous experience, see Eric Cheyfitz, “Balancing the Earth: Native American Philosophies and the Environmental Crisis,” Arizona Quarterly: A Journal of American Literature, Culture, and Theory 65, no. 3 (2009): 139–62; Annette Watson and Orville H. Huntington, “They’re here – I can feel them: the epistemic spaces of Indigenous and Western Knowledges,” Social & Cultural Geography 9, no. 3 (May 2008): 257–81. Research on human-animal relationships in the Hawaiian context presented in this section was conducted with Prof. Noenoe Silva and as Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller and Noenoe Silva, “Sharks and Pigs: Animating Hawaiian Sovereignty Against the Anthropological Machine,” South Atlantic Quarterly 110, no. 2 (2011): 429–46.
94.
There are, of course, stories about metamorphoses in Western literature, from classical sources (Greek mythology and Ovid) to Kafka and contemporary stories of vampires and werewolves. Nonetheless, as Malabou points out, these Western stories evince a limit to what can be changed, limits that are significantly violated in Hawaiian stories. See Catherine Malabou, Ontologie de l’accident : Essai sur la plasticité destructrice (Editions Léo Scheer, 2009), 15–24. The erasure of the distinction between nature and culture that dominates much posthumanist work critical of Western ontologies questions the basis for understanding this distinction as Western. Deleuzian assemblages, Donna Haraway’s naturecultures, Bruno Latour’s hybrids, and other efforts to decenter human experience join in the effort to rethink objects and subjects in order to demonstrate, in Jane Bennett’s words, that “the locus of agency is always a human-nonhuman working group” and that ethics now “resides in one’s response to the assemblages in which one finds oneself participating,” Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2009), xvii, 37. My effort here is to stress Malabou’s efforts to rethink recognition and other forgotten Hegelian ethical impulses within new ontologies that can reinscribe the political relations manifest within neocolonial dynamics. This is not always compatible with other posthumanist work that sees the always-already human/non-human assemblage at work. Malabou’s sharp critique of Deleuzian scholarship on assemblages can be found in Catherine Malabou, “Who’s Afraid of Hegelian Wolves?,” in Deleuze: A Critical Reader (Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1996), 114–38.
95.
Hawai‘i Act 148, 2010, recently banned the possession of shark fins and shark finning in Hawai‘i’s waters. A proposed ban on shark finning has been linked to native Hawaiian values at least since the late 1990s. See Letter of Randal Ogata, Administrator of the Center for Marine Conservation, House Congressional Record, 27682, November 1, 1999.
96.
Albert L. Tester, “Notes: Fatal Shark Attack, Oahu, Hawaii, December 13, 1958,” Pacific Science XIV (1960): 181–4.
97.
The proposed legislation opens with this paragraph: “The legislature finds that sharks, called ‘mano’ in the Hawaiian language, carry great cultural, historical, and spiritual significance for many native Hawaiians, native Hawaiian practitioners, and others who value the Hawaiian culture. Sharks are revered and regarded by many native Hawaiians as their ‘‘aumakua,’ a protective ancestral spirit.” Hawai‘i HB 2705, “Relating to Sharks,” 2010, Section 1.
98.
Amy Ku‘uleialoha Stillman, “The Hawaiian hula and legacies of institutionalization,” Comparative American Studies 5, no. 2 (2007): 221–34; Carlos Andrade, Hā‘ena: through the eyes of the ancestors (Honolulu, Hawai‘i: University of Hawaii Press, 2008), 23.
99.
See the parallel arguments of Brenna Bhandar, “Plasticity and post-colonial recognition: ‘owning, knowing and being’,” Law & Critique (Forthcoming).
100.
John Charlot, The Kamapua‘a Literature: The Classical Traditions of the Hawaiian Pig God as a Body of Literature (Laie, Hawaii: Institute for Polynesian Studies, Brigham Young University – Hawai‘i Campus, 1993); Lilikalā Kame‘eleihiwa, trans., He Mo‘olelo Ka‘ao O Kamapua‘a (A Legendary Tradition of Kamapua‘a, the Hawaiian Pig-God): An Annotated Translation of a Hawaiian Epic from Ka Leo O Ka Lāhui, June 22, 1891–July 23, 1891 (Honolulu: Bishop Museum Press, 1996).
101.
See, generally, Graham Harvey, “Environmentalism in the Construction of Indigeneity,” Ecotheology: Journal of Religion, Nature & the Environment 8, no. 2 (December 2003): 206–23.
102.
C. Fujikane and J. Y, Okamura, “Whose vision? Asian settler colonialism in Hawaii,” Special issue. Amerasia Journal 26 (2000); C. Fujikane, “Asian Settler Colonialism in Hawai‘i,” Amerasia Journal 26, no. 2 (2000); B. Isaki, “A decolonial archive: The historical space of Asian settler politics in a time of Hawaiian nationhood,” Dissertation (University of Hawaii, 2008).
103.
Noel Kent, Hawaii: Islands Under the Influence (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1983); George Cooper and Gavan Daws, Land and power in Hawaii: the Democratic years (Honolulu, Hawaii: Benchmark Books, 1985).
104.
B. Isaki, “A decolonial archive.”
105.
Bianca Isaki, “Where in the World? Cultural Geopolitics of East/West Identities,” in Constellations of the transnational: modernity, culture, critique (Rodopi, 2007), 115–6.
106.
Catherine Malabou, “History and the Process of Mourning in Hegel and Freud,” 19.
107.
S. Freud, “Mourning and melancholia (1917),” Collected articles 4 (1953): 152–70.
108.
Catherine Malabou, “History and the Process of Mourning in Hegel and Freud,” 20.
