References
- Anderson, B. (1992). Imagined communities: Reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism. London: Verso.
- Appadurai, A. (1990). Disjuncture and difference in the global cultural economy. In M. Featherstone (Ed.), Global culture: Nationalism, globalization, and modernity (pp. 295–310). London: Sage Publications.
- Bennett, J. A. (1987). The wealth of the solomons: A history of a pacific archipelago, 1800–1978. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press.
- Boyarin, J. (1994). Space, time, and the politics of memory. In J. Boyarin (Ed.), Remapping memory: The politics of tine space (pp. 1–37). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
- Davenport, W., & Coker, G. (1967). The Moro movement of Guadalcanal, British Solomon islands protectorate. Journal of the Polynesian Society, 76, 123–175.
- Eriksen, T. H. (2010). Ethnicity and nationalism: Anthropological perspectives (3rd ed.). London: Pluto Press.
- Fernandez, J. (1984). Emergence and convergence in some African sacred places. Geoscience and Man, 24, 119–133.
- Fernandez, J. (2003). Emergence and convergence in some African sacred places. In S. Low & D. Lawrence-Zuniga (Eds.), The anthropology of space and place: Locating culture (pp. 187–203). Oxford: Blackwell.
- Fraenkel, J. (2004). The manipulation of custom: From uprising to intervention in the Solomon Islands. Wellington, New Zealand: Victoria University Press.
- Frank, A. G. (1969). Latin America: Underdevelopment or revolution. New York: Monthly Review Press.
- Friedland, R., & Boden, D. (1994). Now here: An introduction to space, time and modernity. In R. Friedland & D. Boden (Eds.), Now here: Space, time and modernity (pp. 1–60). Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Giddens, A. (1994). Forward. In R. Friedland & D. Boden (Eds.), Nowhere: Space, time and modernity (pp. xi–xiii). Berkeley: University of California Press.
- Gramsci, A. (1971). Selections from the prison notebooks. London: Lawrence and Wishart.
- Hobsbawm, E., & Ranger, T. O. (Eds.). (1983). The invention of tradition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Hookey, J. F. (1969). The establishment of a plantation economy in the British Solomon Islands protectorate. In The history of Melanesia (pp. 229–238). Second Waigani Seminar. Port Moresby: University of Papua New Guinea.
- Keesing, R. M. (1992). Custom and confrontation: The kwaio struggle for cultural autonomy. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
- Keesing, R. M., & Tonkinson, R. (Eds.). (1982). Reinventing traditional culture: The politics of kastom in Island Melanesia [Special Issue]. Mankind, 13, 297–399.
- Moore, C. (2004). Happy isles in crisis: The historical causes for a failing state in the Solomon Islands, 1998–2004. Canberra: Asia Pacific Press.
- Ryniker, D. C. (2001). A hard stone people: Social relations and the nation-state in the Vaturanga district, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands (Ph.D. Dissertation). Department of Anthropology, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver.
- Ryniker, D. C. (2012). The silent missiles of Guadalcanal: Magic as rhetoric in the sandline controversy. Oceania, 82, 152–163. doi: 10.1002/j.1834-4461.2012.tb00126.x
- Scheffler, H., & Larmour, P. (1987). Solomon Islands: Evolving a new custom. In R. Crocombe (Ed.), Land tenure in the pacific (pp. 303–323). Suva: University of the South Pacific.
- Wallerstein, I. (1974). The modern world system, capitalist agriculture and the origins of the European world economy in the sixteenth century. New York: Academic Press.
- Williams, R. (1977). Marxism and literature. Vol. 1. Oxford: Oxford University Press.