@misc{jacka_2008, title={Reverse anthropology. Indigenous analysis of social and environmental relations in New Guinea}, volume={103}, number={1}, journal={Anthropos}, author={Jacka, J. K.}, year={2008}, pages={268–269} } @inbook{jacka_2007, title={Our skins are weak: Ipili modernity and the demise of discipline}, ISBN={0890894760}, booktitle={Embodying modernity and postmodernity: Ritual, praxis, and social change in Melanesia}, publisher={Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press}, author={Jacka, J. K.}, year={2007}, pages={39–67} } @article{jacka_2007, title={Whitemen, the Ipili, and the city of gold: A history of the politics of race and development in highlands New Guinea}, volume={54}, ISSN={["1527-5477"]}, DOI={10.1215/00141801-2007-003}, abstractNote={Ipili speakers in the highlands of Papua New Guinea creatively use the category “whiteman” both to structure their longing for socioeconomic progress and development and to critique the very institutions associated with development that they desire. This article explores the history of Ipili-white interactions from first contact in the 1930s, through the rise of indigenous mining, and up to the present to trace how “whiteness” as a category has transformed Ipili understandings of whites and the West. Today the Ipili, as landowners associated with the Porgera gold mine, are intimately entangled with development and its benefits and ills, which have prompted debate over how to build a “modern” town in the highlands.}, number={3}, journal={ETHNOHISTORY}, author={Jacka, Jerry K.}, year={2007}, pages={445–472} } @article{jacka_2006, title={Empowering the past, confronting the future: The Duna people of Papua New Guinea}, volume={26}, number={4}, journal={Mountain Research and Development}, author={Jacka, J. K.}, year={2006}, pages={381–382} } @misc{jacka_2005, title={Becoming sinners: Christianity and moral torment in a Papua New Guinea Society}, volume={34}, number={5}, journal={Contemporary Sociology}, author={Jacka, J. K.}, year={2005}, pages={518–519} } @misc{jacka_2005, title={Emplacement and millennial expectations in an era of development and globalization: Heaven and the appeal of Christianity for the Ipili}, volume={107}, number={4}, journal={American Anthropologist}, author={Jacka, J. K.}, year={2005}, pages={643–653} } @article{jacka_2002, title={Cults and Christianity among the Enga and Ipili}, volume={72}, ISSN={["0029-8077"]}, DOI={10.1002/j.1834-4461.2002.tb02787.x}, abstractNote={ABSTRACTIn this article, I examine the continuities between early‐contact cult activities and present day Christianity among the western Enga and eastern Ipili of highlands Papua New Guinea. Christians today see the cults as early attempts to ‘open the road’ for the coming of whites and missionization. Cult leaders are currently understood as prophets who had received messages from God and were sent out to herald the coming new era of social change. The ritual killing of a young man in the 1940s by cult leaders is conceptualized as the local version of the crucifixion of Jesus. The data herein illustrate the creative means by which Ipili and Enga in this region have indigenized Christianity and located their own regional histories and practices in the broader scope of world history.}, number={3}, journal={OCEANIA}, author={Jacka, J}, year={2002}, month={Mar}, pages={196–214} } @article{jacka_2002, title={Remaking the world: Myth, mining, and social change among the Duna of Papua New Guinea}, volume={111}, number={4}, journal={Journal of the Polynesian Society}, author={Jacka, J. K.}, year={2002}, pages={405–407} } @article{jacka_2001, title={Coca Cola and Kolo: Land, ancestors, and development}, volume={17}, number={4}, journal={Anthropology Today}, author={Jacka, J. K.}, year={2001}, pages={3–8} } @inbook{jacka_2001, title={On the outside looking in: Attitudes and responses of non-landowners toward mining at Porgera}, booktitle={Mining in Papua New Guinea: Analysis and policy implications}, publisher={Papua New Guinea : University of Papua New Guinea Press}, author={Jacka, J. K.}, editor={B. Imbun and P. McGavinEditors}, year={2001}, pages={45–62} } @article{jacka_2001, title={Times enmeshed: Gender, space, and history among the Duna of Papua New Guinea.}, volume={28}, ISSN={["0094-0496"]}, DOI={10.1525/ae.2001.28.1.251}, abstractNote={Times Enmeshed: Gender, Space, and History among the Duna of Papua New Guinea. Gabriele Stürzenhofecker. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1998. 242 pp., tables, photographs, appendix, bibliography, notes, index.}, number={1}, journal={AMERICAN ETHNOLOGIST}, author={Jacka, J}, year={2001}, month={Feb}, pages={251–252} } @inbook{jacka_1999, title={Fishing}, ISBN={189590126X}, booktitle={The history and ethnohistory of the Aleutians East Borough}, publisher={Kingston, Ont.; Fairbanks, AK: Limestone Press}, author={Jacka, J. K.}, editor={R. Pierce, K. Arndt and S. McGowanEditors}, year={1999}, pages={213–242} }