Kamana Beamer | |
---|---|
Pronunciation | Kah-mah-nah-m-eye-kah-lah-nee |
Born | Brenton Kamanamaikalani Beamer |
Education | B.A. UH Mānoa, 2002
M.A. UH Mānoa, 2005 Ph.D. UH Mānoa, 2008 |
Occupation | Professor
Author Geographer |
Spouse | Lauae Beamer |
Parent |
|
Relatives | Keola Beamer (uncle)
Winona Beamer (grandmother) Helen Desha Beamer (great great grandmother) |
Website | https://www.kamanabeamer.com/ |
Dr. Kamana Beamer (born Brenton Kamanamaikalani Beamer in the late 1970's) is an established author, geographer, and educator on natural resources and Hawaiian Studies. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] He currently holds the Dana Naone Hall Chair in the Center for Hawaiian Studies with a joint appointment in the Richardson School of Law and the Hawai‘inuiākea School of Hawaiian Knowsledge at the University of Hawai'i at Mānoa (UH Mānoa). [6] [7] He is one of eight panelists appointed by Hawai'i Governor David Ige to hold stewardship over Mauna Kea. [8]
Beamer was born and raised on the island of Hawai'i and comes from a family of Hawaiian musicians [9]. In 1972, his father, singer-songwriter Kapono Beamer (who founded "The Beamer Brothers" with his brother, Keola Beamer), worked with Keola to release an album titled "This Is Our Island Home - We Are Her Sons," followed by several other albums that influenced "Hawaiian contemporary music." [9] [3] Additionally, his grandmother Winona Beamer ("Aunty Nona") was a proponent of authentic Hawaiian performing arts and culture. [9] [10] She was also the cousin of Hawaiian Music Hall of Fame inductee Mahi Beamer and the granddaughter of musician and composer Helen Deisha Beamer. [9]
Continuing his family's legacy, Beamer joined the Kamehameha Schools Hawaiian Ensemble, a group that Winona established when she taught at Kamehameha Schools. [4] Beamer eventually came to be the vocalist and guitarist for his band, Kāmau (with Kaliko Ma'i'i and Adam Zaslow), debuting their album "Live from the Lo'i" in 2007 when he was just 29. [3] Kāmau was recognized as "maoli music" and focused on political issues surrounding Hawai'i sovereignty and demilitarization. [4] [11]
Beamer graduated from Kamehameha Schools in 1996 and went on to Marymount College, where he received an Associate of Arts degree in 1998. [7] [11] He was offered a football scholarship, briefly attending Bethel College in Newton, Kansas before attending to Occidental College in Los Angeles, California to be "closer to the ocean". [10] Beamer wanted to take Hawaiian language to satisfy the two years of a foreign language required to graduate, however Occidental College did not recognize Hawaiian as a language, and so he returned to Hawai'i and finished his undergrad education at UH Mānoa where he received his Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy and Hawaiian Studies in 2002. [7] [10] [11] He went on to receive a Master of Arts and Ph.D. in Cultural Geography [11] at UH Mānoa. As a graduate student, Beamer worked as a Research Assistant for Dr. Kaeo Duarte from 2002-2004 and became a Graduate Teaching Assistant and Hawaiian language teacher in 2004. [11]
In 2005, Beamer submitted his thesis for a Master of Arts in Geography in which he focused on the impacts of colonialism on Hawai'i. [5] Beamer investigated the connection between foreign mapping of the Hawaiian Islands and the dispossession that accompanied it, shifting the previous guidance of land-tenure to a modern capitalist model. [5] He sought to identify the role of traditional palena (boundaries) and understand how colonial mapping changed the Hawaiian landscape. [5] In his 2008 Ph.D. dissertation, "Na wai kamana?", Beamer expanded on this idea, citing adaptability as being a crucial aspect of Hawaiian character. [12] Beamer demonstrated that, despite Euro-American imperialism and the colonization that ensued, Native Hawaiians persevered not by resisting change, but by using it for their own means. [12]
From 2001 to 2015, Beamer worked towards restoring the lo'i (wetland taro patch) in Waipi'o Valley. His time spent in the lo'i expanded his understanding of the state of water resources in Hawai'i. [11] [7] In 2013, he was nominated and confirmed to serve on Hawai'i's Commission of Water and Resource Management based on his extensive experience in the field stemming from speaking at numerous conferences, publishing multiple works on Hawaiian resource management, and land tenure. [11] He was again nominated and reconfirmed to serve on the board in 2017, continuing to help manage Hawaii's public lands, water sources, and minerals. [7] [11]
Kamanamaikalani Beamer has been a prominent figure in the movement to protect Mauna Kea, a sacred dormant volcano in Hawai'i, from what many native Hawaiians see as environmental and cultural desecration. Beamer has used his position as a cultural practitioner and scholar to raise awareness about the importance of Mauna Kea to the people of Hawai'i and the government. He has been a critic of the construction of a large thirty meter telescope on Mauna Kea's summit. [14] [15]
Beamer has also used his academic background to research the cultural and environmental significance of Mauna Kea, publishing numerous papers and articles [16] on the subject. He has argued that the mountain is not only a site of cultural and spiritual importance, but also an important ecological resource, with unique plant and animal species that are endangered by the construction of the telescope. [17]
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