He subsequently taught sociology at the University of the South Pacific[2] and, in 1983, he became Head of the Department of Sociology at the University's main campus in Suva.[7][8] In 1997, Hauʻofa became the founder and director of the Oceania Centre for Arts and Culture at the USP in Suva.[3][4][7] The intention of the space being to amplify Pacific cultures, students, and knowledges for "spaces where we give free rein to our imagination and ample time to experiment with and develop new forms and styles, new movements, sounds, and voices, that are unmistakably [Pacific] ours."[9]
Writing
He was the author of Mekeo: Inequality and Ambivalence in a Village Society;[10]Tales of the Tikongs,[11] which deals (through fiction) with indigenous South Pacific Islander responses to the changes and challenges brought by modernisation and development; Kisses in the Nederends,[8] a novel; and, more recently, We Are the Ocean,[12] a selection of earlier works, including fiction, poetry and essays. Tales of the Tikongs was translated into Danish in 2002 by John Allan Pedersen (as Stillehavsfortællinger, ISBN87-7514-076-4)
The BBC History magazine writes that Hauʻofa provided a "reconceptualisation of the Pacific": In his "influential essay Our Sea of Islands", he argued that Pacific Islanders "were connected rather than separated by the sea. Far from being sea-locked peoples marooned on coral or volcanic tips of land, islanders formed an oceanic community based on voyaging."[13] The reframing of the Pacific from "Islands from a Far Sea" to "A Sea of Islands" offered a change from a "belittlement" of the islands to an "enlargement" in regard to the Pacific on a global scale.[14] It centers Pacific Islanders relationships to each other, as historically and presently embedded, and their relationships as navigators of the vast sea.
The essay Our Sea of Islands was published in A New Oceania : Rediscovering our Sea of Islands, co-edited by Hauʻofa, Vijay Naidu and Eric Waddell, published in 1993.[15]
Death
Hauʻofa died at the Suva Private Hospital in Suva at 7 AM on 11 January 2009 at the age of sixty-nine.[16] He was survived by his wife, Barbara, and son, Epeli Si'i.[16] A funeral service was held at the University of the South Pacific campus in Suva on 15 January 2009.[7] He was buried at his residence in Wainadoi, Fiji.[7][17][5]
Legacy
Hau'ofa was awarded a posthumous honorary doctorate in literature by the University of Auckland in 2023.[18]
^Hau'ofa, Epeli (2008). "Our Sea of Islands". We Are the Ocean: Selected. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i.
^E. Hauʻofa, V. Naidu & E. Waddell (eds.), A New Oceania : Rediscovering our Sea of Islands, Suva : University of the South Pacific, in association with Beake House, 1993, ISBN982-01-0200-6