Where all the rivers flow west: Maps, abstraction and change in the Papua New Guinea lowlands
Abstract
‘Abstraction’ has been often identified as a key element in social change. Analyses, however, have often conflated the ideas of abstraction as ‘object’ and as ‘process’. This paper discusses two maps drawn by or on behalf of Kubo men, of the interior lowlands of southern Papua New Guinea. They were drawn in the context of recent exposure to a vast Liquefied Natural Gas project initiated on the land of their neighbours and both, as abstractions from new observations and experiences, were intended as assertions of rights to land. They derived, however, from entirely different logics: one more compatible with ‘Western’ understandings of ownership, the other more in keeping with earlier Kubo understandings of belonging. By reference to these maps, we consider the role of abstraction in social change and argue that while, as object, abstraction is relative as a process it is universal.
Number of times cited according to CrossRef: 3
- Peter D. Dwyer and Monica Minnegal, ‘We Are Fire Clan’: Groups, Names and Identity in Papua New Guinea, Oceania, 88, 1, (90-106), (2018).
- Lepani Karigawa, Jacob Babarinde and Suman Holis, Sustainability of Land Groups in Papua New Guinea, Land, 5, 4, (14), (2016).
- Peter D. Dwyer and Monica Minnegal, Wild dogs and village dogs in New Guinea: were they different?, Australian Mammalogy, 38, 1, (1), (2016).




