#  Embedded Nature - Bibliography 

 



 ![embedded-biblio](/sites/g/files/omnuum4921/files/2024-12/embedded-biblio.jpg)

 

*Mauga, a high chief, who wrote the treaty and signed it, giving to the United States a coaling station at Pongo Pongo, Samoa about 1887, 2004.29.24673*Arbeit, Wendy  
1994(?) Tapa in Tonga. Honolulu: Palm Frond Productions.

Bell, Lillian, and Ulista Brooks  
1979 Tapa, the Bark Paper of Samoa and Tonga. Tokyo: Bunsio Press.

Brigham, William T.  
1911 Ka Hana Kapa: The Making of Bark-Cloth in Hawaii. Bernice P. Bishop Museum Memoirs, vol. 3. Honolulu: Bernice P. Bishop Museum.

D’Alleva, Anne  
1998 Arts of the Pacific Islands. New York: Harry Abrams.

Holdcraft, T. Rose  
2001 “Research, Exhibition and Preservation of the Barkcloth Collections from the Pacific in the Harvard-Peabody Museum,” in Barkcloth: Aspects of Preparation, Use, Deterioration, Conservation and Display, Margot M. Wright, ed. London: Archetype Publications Ltd.

Kaeppler, Adrienne L.  
1978 “Artificial Curiosities.” Special Publication no. 65. Honolulu: Bernice P. Bishop Museum.

Kooijman, Simon  
1972 Tapa in Polynesia. Bulletin no. 234. Honolulu: Bernice P. Bishop Museum.

Leonard, Anne, and John Terrell  
1980 Patterns of Paradise. Chicago: Field Museum of Natural History.

Neich, Roger, and Mick Pendergrast  
2001 Pacific Tapa. Auckland: David Bateman Ltd., and Auckland Museum.

Pritchard, Mary J.  
1984 Siapo: Bark Cloth Art of Samoa. American Samoa: Council on Culture, Arts and Humanities.

Rose, Roger G., Carol Turchan, Natalie Firnhaber, and Linnea O. Brown  
1988 The Bishop Museum Tapa Collection: Conservation and Research into Special Problems. Bishop Museum Occasional Papers vol. 28. Honolulu: Bernice P. Bishop Museum.

Watson, Rubie S., Nynke Dorhout, and Juliette Rogers  
1996 “Pacific Collections at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University.” Pacific Arts, The Journal of the Pacific Arts Association 13 &amp; 14:57–68.