Table of contents : Contents Acknowledgments Notes on Orthography and Translations Introduction: The Subtleties of a Map and a Painting 1. Reich Kamehameha’s: Hawai‘i’s Special Place in the Pacific 2. “Not Only Permanently Independent but Powerful”: Charles St. Julian and Early Pan-Oceanian Diplomacy 3. “To Advance as Polynesians” and “To Maintain the Status Quo in the East”: The Internationalism of King Kalākaua and His Supporters 4. Ka Hoku o Osiania: A New Departure in Hawaiian Pan-Oceanianism 5. “Our Constitution Is Based on That of the Sandwich Islands”: The Transfer of Hawaiian Institutions and Ideas 6. From “A Power in the World” to “Large Ocean States”: The Legacy of Hawai‘i’s Pan-Oceanian Vision Epilogue: Why the Kaimiloa Both Precedes and Follows the Hōkūle‘a Glossary Notes References Index About the Author