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Noenoe Silva

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Name
  
Noenoe Silva


Role
  
Author

Noenoe Silva wwwpoliticalsciencehawaiiedufacultyimagessil

Books
  
Aloha Betrayed: Native Hawaiian Resistance to American Colonialism

Ku e 11 24 08 ending noenoe silva m4v


Noenoe K. Silva (born October 19, 1954) is a Hawaiian author and scholar. A professor of political science at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, her work has appeared in Biography, American Studies, and The Contemporary Pacific.

Contents

Life

Silva was born on Oʻahu and is of Kanaka Maoli descent. She returned to Hawaii in 1985 after growing up in California. In 1991, she earned a bachelor’s in Hawaiian language. In 1993, she completed a Master's degree in Library and Information Studies, and in 1999 earned a PhD in political science.

Work

While still a doctoral candidate, Silva was instrumental in rediscovering the Kūʻē Petitions, which had been presented to the United States government in 1897 in an attempt to halt American annexation of Hawaii. The petitions formed part of the basis for her book Aloha Betrayed: Native Hawaiian Resistance to American Colonialism, an examination of Hawaiian language accounts of the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom.

In 2006, Silva received a Katrin H. Lamon Fellowship from the School for Advanced Research to continue her research along similar lines through building a database of Hawaiian authors.

Silva also contributed to A Dictionary of the Hawaiian Language, an updated reprint of the first Hawaiian-English dictionary prepared by Lorrin Andrews in 1865, which was published by Island Heritage in 2003.

Awards

Aloha Betrayed received the Kenneth W. Baldridge Prize from Brigham Young University–Hawaii.

References

Noenoe Silva Wikipedia