essay by cheryl yow
http://www.harpercollins.com/books/9780688050337
/Coming_of_Age_in_Samoa/index.aspx
The Mead-Freeman controversy
Margaret Mead's book
 - 'Coming of Age in Samoa': 
is a Psychological Study of  Primitive Youth 
for Western Civilization.
Derek Freeman unmasked 
the fake research done by Margaret Mead.
Heretic is a 1996 play 
by Australian playwright David Williamson
that explores Derek Freeman's reaction to 
Margaret Mead's "The Coming of Age in Samoa". 
Question
‘While postcolonial literature aims to ‘subvert the canon’
by ‘celebrating the neglected or marginalized Other’ 
The heretic compromises and undermines the identity of the 
subaltern Other instead.’
With reference to at least one theoretical essay from your 
Offprints Collection, discuss this statement with reference 
to David Williamson’s The Heretic.
In Williamson’s Heretic, the audience’s first impression 
of the Samoans is through Margaret Mead’s perspective. 
‘Coming of Age in Samoa’ Mead’s influential book of the 
twentieth century portrays Samoa as a paradise on earth 
(a society where sexual jealousy, envy, competitiveness and 
aggression were non-existent) as well as a haven for free 
love. The play depicts the fantasy effect typically 
associated with the intoxicating South Pacific: 
white sands, sparkling sapphire sea and Polynesian 
drum rhythms. So when Aviata, the handsome, strongly built, 
half-naked Samoan youth, eventually appeared and asked 
Margaret ‘Would you like to be made love to properly?’
(Heretic, p.34), the Western fantasy is instantly evoked. 
The audience are too mesmerized by then to ever question 
this stereotyping of the Samoans. South Pacific has being 
repeatedly represented as a stereotype paradise through 
mythologizing and romances. It serves to inspire 
the utopian hope of the ultimate ‘ideal’ society that 
can remedy the inadequacies of the Western society
 – being deeply repressed and sexually inhibited. 
Mead by portraying Samoa as a culture of an erotic 
sphere is presenting endless potential for pleasure 
and perversion.
Heretic engages with the controversial issue of representing 
the indigene, the Other. The issue of representation is 
central in post-colonial debate: How the Other is represented 
is questionable: through whose perspective? the indigene or 
others? Australians are explicitly racist -anti-aboriginals; 
the relationship between white settlers and aborigines is a 
sensitive issue. Hence, Williamson uses distancing issue- the 
academic nurture versus nature debate between two social 
scientists that seems unrelated to Australian society and an 
analogous situation (Mead’s relationship with Samoans) to 
explore the profoundly perturbing question of specific post
-colonial predicament of representation and issues that is 
fundamental to his society.
Mead, an American anthropologist, went to Samoa with a very 
specific schema - if she could prove that adolescence is not 
a time of mayhem with the young Samoans; it would validate 
that human nature is moulded by their culture (a social 
construct) rather than an inheritance derived from genes. 
Her ambitious agenda is to invent an ideology to recreate 
the West by introducing ‘ a new blueprint of human 
possibilities’ to America from the South Seas (Heretic,p.58). 
However, Mead, a sovereign Western observer, is greatly 
flawed: with incomplete evidence and superficial analyses 
(her knowledge of the Samoan language was insufficient, she 
based her evidence only on several Samoan women and she spent 
less than a year in Samoa). Anthropology, the field of 
scientific endeavour is supposed to study Others objectively, 
however, it has been known to be heavily constructed in 
favour of the Western hegemonic philosophy. The histories, 
traditions, societies and texts of ‘others’ are seen as 
responses to Western initiatives- and therefore passive, 
dependent...(Said, 1989, OC. No.1). Surely it is the task of 
anthropology to replace this Samoan myth with more specific 
and accurate account, but Mead, instead of representing the 
Samoans, has projected her own fantasies upon the Samoans by 
stereo-typing the enviably primitive’s sexual prowess. 
Derek Freeman, the lone Australian anthropologist, offers a 
counter view – to show the fallacy of Mead’s representation 
while replacing it with his own. With his knowledge of the 
Samoan ‘inner workings’, his fluency of their language and 
his 3 years of experience in Samoa, he too did not represent 
the Samoans in its entirety. Binary differences occur in any 
representation; the indigene was glorified for its pantheism, 
spirituality and stability, however it includes the counter-
response of being primitive and barbaric. Freeman seems to 
focus on the opposing aspects of Mead’s version of the Samoan 
society just to prove her wrong. Thus, if Mead said Samoans 
were sexually liberated; Freeman’s version would indicate 
they are sexually conservative. Though Freeman’s study of 
Samoans is evidently more reliable than Mead’s; it 
implicitly pave the way for his personal agenda: focusing 
only on aspects that would prove Mead’s ideology a fake. 
However, in the midst of the Mead versus Freeman’s 
(Nurture versus Nature) debate, the Samoans were never 
ever given their own voice to speak. 
Derek sets Margaret as the ‘Other’: irrational and emotional 
white female while depicting himself as the objective and 
rational white male. However, he repeatedly reveals his 
impassioned nature and distorts his own academic views: 
the extent of breaking a precious Iban artifact in front of 
British Commissioner, which he insists is a fake; by harping 
on Margaret’s bisexual relation with Ruth which has nothing 
to do with her standing as an anthropologist and his sexual 
tension being exposed by his Freudian slip when he declares 
to Mead ‘ I was scared you might take me to bed’ 
(Heretic, p.57). The representation of women in Heretic is 
visibly stereotyped.When the characterization is evidently 
stereotyped, the play becomes questionable and it raises 
questions about representation. Mead is portrayed as highly 
subjective, irrational and emotional; the Samoan women as 
sexual objects; Monica, his wife as the typical submissive 
wife and an artist that lacks opportunities and Elsie, his 
mother serves as an archetype of the Freudian ‘s Oedipus 
complex. Both Monica’s physical likeliness to Derek’s 
mother and Mead’s resemblance of a teacher or ‘mother’ 
image is the stereotype of ‘mother-fixated’ in Freudian’s 
Oedipus complex where individuals choose sexual partners 
who are discernible surrogates for their mother. Derek’s 
position as the defender of the oppressed is undermined by 
his impulse to assert his male superiority in his marriage 
and his obsession to destroy Margaret in an overwhelming need 
to break free of maternal bond. 
Williamson employs dramatic devices: the play is depicted in 
Derek’s dream in a non-linear approach; by using this 
unconventional feature: non-traditional adherence to linear 
time, he aims to subvert the canon and undermine the imperial 
historical narrative with its hegemonic position. The context 
of the dream is significant as it is intrinsic to aboriginal 
modes of thoughts. Additionally, the dream depicts the surreal 
dimension- the illusion of myth and a sense of hazy distorted 
representations. The sixties’ image evoked in Act one that is 
associated with positive nuances of peace, hope, innocence 
and youthfulness is sharply contrasted with the sixties’ image of 
Act two which suggests indiscipline and interference. This 
binary – positive/negative representation of the sixties- 
proposes the often opposing elements of whatever that is 
presented. 
Williamson presents the Samoans as discerning participants 
of the hegemonic Western’s strategy: ‘just because you come 
from America…doesn’t mean you can come and steal our men’
(Heretic, p.33); ‘She was the copulating dog, not us!’ 
… She took away our humanity. She made us seem like animals 
to the world…(Heretic, p.68-9). They wittily offer a 
stereotype to oppose Mead’s view of Samoan’s sexuality: 
‘All she talks about is sex, sex, sex… my mother says 
all Americans are the same… its because they eat too
much meat’ (Heretic, p.91). The significance of Freeman 
providing evidence that Mead is being duped by the two 
Samoan girls who indulged in ‘recreational lying’, a 
favourite Polynesian pastime; is the ultimate hoax to 
subvert the hegemonic imperial centre. The Samoans in 
their simplicity were able to undermine a white woman 
of global power; in doing so, it reveals Mead’s naivety 
in believing what she wanted to see- a myth. 
Even when Mead’s Samoa was exposed as a myth, Rick Cooper 
stated that ‘… but so what! It was a useful myth' 
(Heretic, p.94). This suggests that in the Australian racial 
hegemony, the aborigines were as Terry Goldie affirms 
‘a semiotic pawn on a chess board under the control of the 
white signmaker’ (OC, No.14). Samoans seems to be represented 
but they are in fact being constructed as the Other from the 
single perspective of the Western’s imagination. The troubled, 
sexually disciplined West versus the simple-minded, sexually 
promiscuous Samoans (although presented positively). Even 
when representation is positive nonetheless it inexorably 
defined them as the Other. 
The relationship between Samoa and Western hegemonic 
discourse is based on power and dominion. Only the voice 
of the sovereign anthropologist (Mead) is considered, the 
voice of the indigenous Samoans were silenced. This concurs 
with Spivak’s assertion ‘The subaltern cannot speak’ neither 
can they be heard or read. Nobody could or would speak for 
them, their own voices remained unheard: silent. Though 
Williamson is from the metropolitan Australian elite, he 
is keenly aware of the racial and power structures that 
oppressed the ‘fourth world’ (the subaltern) in the 
Australian society. In ‘Heretic’, Williamson seeks to 
subvert the canon, undermine the hegemonic power and 
celebrate the identity of the subaltern.
(1399 words)
Bibliography
Williamson, David. (1996) ‘Heretic’, Penguin Books Australia Ltd, Australia.
Offprints Collection: Post-Colonial writings from India and Australia, SIM University, 2001.
Goldie, Terry. ‘ The Representation of the Indigene’ Offprints Collection: Post-Colonial writings from India and Australia, SIM University, 2001.
Griffiths, Gareth. ‘The Myth of Authenticity: Representation, Discourse and Social Practice’ Offprints Collection: Post-Colonial writings from India and Australia, SIM University, 2001.
Said, W. Edward. ‘Representing the Colonized: Anthropology’s Interlocutors’ Offprints Collection: Post-Colonial writings from India and Australia, SIM University, 2001.
Spivak, Gayatri Charavorty. (1985) ‘ Can the Subaltern Speak?’ Speculations on Widow-Sacrifice’, Wedge, Winter/Spring, pp. 120-30.
Monday, December 28, 2009
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