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The island of stone money

Chapter 2: ILLUSTRATIONS
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About This Book

A detailed travel-ethnographic study of a Micronesian island community presents daily life, dwellings, and social organization. It describes native houses and bachelors’ clubs, clothing and personal adornment, and the songs, dances, and incantations that structure performance and social occasions. A substantial portion examines the island’s distinctive stone money system—its manufacture, circulation, and role in exchange, status, and ceremonial giving—while also outlining friendships, kinship patterns, and class distinctions. Religion, burial rites, tattooing practices, and sensory perception such as color classification are discussed with attention to ritual meaning and material culture. Practical appendices supply grammatical notes, vocabulary, maps, and photographic illustrations that document the author’s observations.

ILLUSTRATIONS

PAGE
A Record, in the Making Frontispiece
A Native Residence 22
A Rich Man’s House 24
House of a Copra Trader 26
A Native-Made Path 30
A “Pabai,” or Men’s Club-House 36
Return From a Fishing Cruise on the Open Sea 40
A “Failu” 44
Man and Wife of “Pimlingai,” or Slave Class 48
Lemet, a Mispil 52
Waigong, a Boy of Sixteen or Seventeen 56
Full Dress of a High-Class Damsel 60
Inifel, a Turbulent Chief 64
A Phonographic Matinée 72
Four Damsels Who Sang into the Phonograph 74
Lian, Chief of Dulukan 76
The Largest “Fei” on the Island 92
Stone Money Belonging to the “Failu” 96
“Gagai,” or Cat’s Cradle 108
Kakofel, the Daughter of Lian 110
Coconut Grove 114
Migiul, a Mispil 124
Fatumak 126
Fatumak’s Account for Coconuts Rendered 138
The Mode of Carrying Babies 154
The Tattooing of the Men of Fashion 158
Tattooing 159
Usual Tattoo Marks of a Mispil 160
Funeral Gifts of Stone Money and Pearl Shells 166
Gyeiga Placing Two Pearl Shells on Her Father’s Corpse 168
Map 273