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A01=Iokepa Casumbal-Salazar
astronomy
Author_Iokepa Casumbal-Salazar
Category=JBSL11
Category=JHMC
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnography
Hawai'i
Hawai?i
Hawaiian
Indigeneity
Indigenous
Kanaka Maoli
Mauna Kea
Maunakea
Native
Native Hawaiian
observatories
oral history
resistance
resurgence
Settler colonialism
summit tourism
technoscience
Thirty Meter Telescope
TMT

Product details

  • ISBN 9781517902452
  • Weight: 482g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Nov 2025
  • Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Understanding the Hawai'i Island summit of Mauna a Wākea as a place of ancestral connection, cultural resurgence, and political resistance for Native Hawaiians​

First Light is a site-specific study of Native Hawaiian resistance to the construction of the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) on the summit of Mauna a Wākea, the sacred mountain on the island of Hawai'i. Drawing on personal interviews, oral histories, archival research, participant observation, and popular, legal, scientific, and Indigenous discourses, Iokepa Casumbal-Salazar explores both the campaign to build the observatory and the movement against it. He asks how astronomers have become stewards of Mauna a Wākea while Kānaka 'Ōiwi (Aboriginal Hawaiians), in protest, are recast as obstructing progress and clinging to ancient superstitions.

Contextualizing contemporary resistance to telescope expansion within the past 132 years of struggle against U.S. empire in Hawai'i, Casumbal-Salazar argues the Kanaka-led efforts to protect their ancestral lands did not begin with the TMT and only become legible when understood in the broader history of resistance to U.S. settler hegemony as told through the voices and actions of kiaʻi ʻāina (land defenders). First Light explores how settler science, capital, and law have been mobilized in ways that rationalize industrial development projects like the TMT and promote a vision of "coexistence" that enables the dehumanization of Kānaka 'Ōiwi and their alienation from ʻāina.

Challenging the assumptions and aggressions of neoliberal environmental policy, settler multiculturalism, and U.S. military occupation, First Light reinforces calls for a moratorium on new telescope development and a literacy in Kanaka 'Ōiwi movements for life, land, and ea (independence, sovereignty).

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Iokepa Casumbal-Salazar is associate professor in the Department of Critical Race and Ethnic Studies at UC Santa Cruz.

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