Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 May 2010
Readers of my other works on Tikopia will be aware that Tikopia society, in its relatively traditional state or in its more modern shape, was not always in a condition of amity and smooth operation. Apart from long-standing clashes of interest, as between clans or districts, there were also turbulent incidents in which individuals took action, sometimes violently, to remedy a grievance or express a sense of outrage or frustration. Weapons might be brandished, house thatch beaten, and though physical injury to an opponent was not common, it was not unknown. The most usual form of expression of complaint or anger, however, was verbal, by cursing or other protest, often punctuated by the high-pitched yell of Iēfu!, which gave public notification of distress or indignation.
Notable among verbal forms of protest or assertion of dissent have been songs. Tikopia songs of complaint, protest or criticism form part of the general body of Tikopia song in that they conform in structure to the normal poetic and musical patterns. But they have been of special interest to the Tikopia in that they constitute a category known as tauangutu - jeering songs - or commonly mako tauangutu - jeering dance songs - since they nearly all have been composed to be accompaniments to dance. Tauangutu is a compound word, and may be loosely translated sectionally as ‘war of the lips’. Mako tauangutu have a great range of content. They may refer to laziness, lying, slander, theft, desertion and analogous breaches of the social code.
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