This compelling book explores the lived experience of empire in the Pacific, the last region to be contacted & colonized by Europeans following the great voyages of Captain Cook. Unlike conventional accounts that emphasize confrontation & the destruction of indigenous cultures, Islanders reveals there was gain as well as loss, survival as well as suffering, & invention as well as exploitation. Empowered by imaginative research in obscure archives & collections, Thomas rediscovers a rich & surprising history of encounters, not only between Islanders & Europeans, but among Islanders, brought together in new ways by explorers, missionaries & colonists. He tells the story of the making of empire, not through an impersonal survey, but through vivid stories of the lives of men & women
- some visionary, some vicious, & some just eccentric
- & through sensuous evocation of seascapes & landscapes of the Pacific. A fascinating re-creation of an Oceanic world, Islanders offers a new paradigm, not only for histories of the Pacific, but for understandings of cultural contact everywhere.