Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/91853
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Type: Journal article
Title: Great ancestral women: sexuality, gendered mobility, and HIV among the Bamu and Gogodala of Papua New Guinea
Author: Wood, M.
Dundon, A.
Citation: Oceania, 2014; 84(2):185-201
Publisher: Wiley
Issue Date: 2014
ISSN: 0029-8077
1834-4461
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Michael Wood and Alison Dundon
Abstract: Faced with a potentially devastating epidemic of HIV/AIDS in Papua New Guinea (PNG), sexuality and mobility have become a focus of national research and prevention programs. In Gogodala and Bamu communities in the Western Province, gendered mobility and sexuality intersect with ancestral narratives that form part of a wider series of Hero Tales found in the southern regions of PNG and Irian Jaya. In this paper we highlight the way these stories detail the travels and activities of female ancestors – known as Sagalu among the Bamui and Sawiya among the Gogodala. We outline the way such ancestral figures are now linked to understandings of contemporary STIs such HIV/AIDS as well as gendered mobility and sexuality more generally. Among the Bamu such links are sometimes directly asserted, with Sagalu represented as the origin if not cause of a uniquely defined variant of HIV/AIDS. Among the Gogodala, however, HIV/AIDS is predominantly understood as something external to the Gogodala and unrelated to ancestors like Sawiya. To explain this difference we note that, historically, Gogodala women have been less mobile and less transactable than their Bamu counterparts who have continued to enact unique understandings of the intersection of heterosexual marriage, gendered mobility, and illness. We argue that the mobility and sexuality of gendered ancestors is salient to understanding these contemporary enactments and their potential implications in light of the HIV epidemic in PNG.
Keywords: ancestral women; gendered mobility; sexuality; HIV/AIDS; Papua New Guinea
Rights: © 2014 Oceania Publications
DOI: 10.1002/ocea.5054
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ocea.5054
Appears in Collections:Anthropology & Development Studies publications
Aurora harvest 2

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