Author Archives: ahtrista

Makahiki games

Text: On the island of Molokai, Hawaii, a series of games called the Makahiki games are a yearly tradition. During the harvest season, which is late spring, there are a series of tournaments with age brackets including men and women. People from all over Hawaii are sent to Molokai to participate in these games. These games include spear throwing, a form of wrestling, and many other competitive things.

Context: The informant’s relationship to this piece is that she participated in it one year. Specifically, her school flew her from Oahu to Molokai to play for one of the games as a 13 year old. She found out about this because in Middle school, her school had a PE section where they played the Makahiki games. The informant interprets these games as a way to celebrate and indulge in her roots in relation to the history and how the games came about. 

Interpretation: I interpret these games as a way to connect with history and just be patriotic. Hawaiian culture is a very strong and uniting culture, so I think these games are another way to bring people together.

Super Bowl appetizer

Text: The informant says she needs to have buffalo chicken dip before every Super Bowl game to ensure the team she wants to win ends up winning.

Context: The informant’s relationship to this piece is original to know that her team will win. She recognizes that it is her comfort food and says it makes her confident in the team. She said it began with the 2012 Super Bowl when Beyonce performed for the first time. The informant said that was the first game she was able to sit down and watch from beginning to end. She connected the buffalo chicken dip to this because that was the only thing that changed compared to the years prior in order to come out with a win. She said this only works for Super Bowls and not any other games. She interprets this as her “superpower” and truly believes that it works. She mentioned that she started eating the buffalo chicken dip really late into one Super Bowl her team was losing so when she ate it, they ended up winning.

Interpretation: The way I interpret this ritual is that the informant wants the reassurance that her team will win to reduce being anxious during the game. Especially because the time where she did not eat the buffalo chicken dip and her team started losing, this gave her more of a way to believe her ritual is true. I find it interesting that this only works for Super Bowls and not any other game.

Writing on public spaces

Text: Writing the word “Compton” on public spaces such as bathrooms, buses, street signs, houses, city buildings, gas stations, or sidewalks in Compton, California.

Context: This informant was born and raised in Compton, California from the 1970s to the 1990s. Everywhere he went in that city, he would see “Compton” graffitied. It was just a known thing that people would write this, so he got this idea from visibly seeing it and growing up doing it with friends. When I asked him “what does it mean?”, his response was “it meant that you are from Compton”.

Analysis: I see this as a way to “mark territory” or to show a sense of community. The city of Compton has a reputation of being dangerous or “ghetto” which I think has some sort of connection to this. I would never see this happening in the city where I am from—Chino Hills, California. I feel like other cities with a similar reputation also do something like this.

Chin Flick

Text: When someone does something that makes you extremely upset, you would flick your chin with the back of your hand.

Context: The informant got this from the movie “Greece”. He rarely uses it, but an example would be when he is driving and someone almost hits him. He said it means “fuck off” to the person you do it towards. He said he thinks it originated in either France or Italy.

Analysis: I would say this is the equivalent of flipping off your middle finger to someone (meaning “f*** you”), but it is not used as commonly. I am not sure if it is known as well as using the middle finger. When I was younger my friends and I used to do this to each other jokingly and innocently. We used to think it was sign language for the same meaning.