Island Queens and Mission Wives: How Gender and Empire Remade Hawai'i's Pacific World

Island Queens and Mission Wives: How Gender and Empire Remade Hawai'i's Pacific World

by Jennifer Thigpen
Island Queens and Mission Wives: How Gender and Empire Remade Hawai'i's Pacific World

Island Queens and Mission Wives: How Gender and Empire Remade Hawai'i's Pacific World

by Jennifer Thigpen

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Overview

In the late eighteenth century, Hawai'i's ruling elite employed sophisticated methods for resisting foreign intrusion. By the mid-nineteenth century, however, American missionaries had gained a foothold in the islands. Jennifer Thigpen explains this important shift by focusing on two groups of women: missionary wives and high-ranking Hawaiian women. Examining the enduring and personal exchange between these groups, Thigpen argues that women's relationships became vital to building and maintaining the diplomatic and political alliances that ultimately shaped the islands' political future. Male missionaries' early attempts to Christianize the Hawaiian people were based on racial and gender ideologies brought with them from the mainland, and they did not comprehend the authority of Hawaiian chiefly women in social, political, cultural, and religious matters. It was not until missionary wives and powerful Hawaiian women developed relationships shaped by Hawaiian values and traditions—which situated Americans as guests of their beneficent hosts—that missionaries successfully introduced Christian religious and cultural values.

Incisively written and meticulously researched, Thigpen's book sheds new light on American and Hawaiian women's relationships, illustrating how they ultimately provided a foundation for American power in the Pacific and hastened the colonization of the Hawaiian nation.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781469668833
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 11/02/2021
Series: Gender and American Culture
Pages: 180
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.41(d)

About the Author

Jennifer Thigpen is assistant professor of history at Washington State University.

Table of Contents


In the late eighteenth century, Hawai'i's ruling elite employed sophisticated methods for resisting foreign intrusion. By the mid-nineteenth century, however, American missionaries had gained a foothold in the islands. Jennifer Thigpen explains this important shift by focusing on two groups of women: missionary wives and high-ranking Hawaiian women. Examining the enduring and personal exchange between these groups, Thigpen argues that women's relationships became vital to building and maintaining the diplomatic and political alliances that ultimately shaped the islands' political future.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Thigpen's book makes significant contributions to American religious history, the history of American missions, and American women's history, and it converses with works in Hawaiian studies and studies of colonialism. Some previous scholars have studied missionary women, other previous scholars have studied Native Hawaiian women's engagement with the mission, but no previous scholar has made the relationship between these two groups an object of study. Thigpen demonstrates convincingly that the relationship between these two groups of women is crucial to understanding why the New England mission to Hawai'i took the shape it did.—David Chang, author of The Color of the Land: Race, Nation, and the Politics of Landownership in Oklahoma, 1832-1929



An interesting, carefully researched, and well-written book that revisits an area of U.S. history that is currently the focus of considerable scholarly analysis. It will be of value for students and scholars of U.S. western history and for Pacific historians, who will be informed and engaged in nineteenth-century Hawaiian history.—Patricia Grimshaw, University of Melbourne

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