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ABSTRACT

Inspired by Klaus Neumann’s critical approach to Pacific history which attends to the ‘trash’ of the past – ‘the irrelevant, the insignificant, the marginal, and the negligible’ – this paper revisits the margins of our sources. Captions, doodles, annotations and other forms of marginal trash need to be addressed in their own right, and for the light they shed on the main body of source materials, whether textual, audio-visual, or artefactual. The folio drawings produced by the Russian anthropologist Nikolai Miklouho-Maclay in Oceania between 1871 and 1883 provide an exemplary if fragmentary archive through which the interplay of the central and the marginal, the visual and the textual, can be considered. The visual richness of his sketches and the scope for historical and ethnographic analysis and reconstruction are considerably enhanced and extended by focusing on his many marginal scribbles, which include obvious captions as well as stray observations, word-lists, and other commentaries.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by Australian Research Council: [grant number DP110104578].

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