Hawai‘i beyond Tropical Overtourism: Decolonial Perspectives on Jasmin ‘Iolani Hakes’ Hula

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25120/etropic.25.1.2026.4283

Keywords:

tropical overtourism, epistemic disobedience, decolonial critique, Indigenous resistance, Hawai’i, Hula, cultural commodification

Abstract

This paper examines Jasmin ‘Iolani Hakes’ debut novel Hula (2023) as a decolonial critique of tropical overtourism, land dispossession, and cultural commodification in Hawai‘i. The study investigates how the novel, which follows a strong heritage of Kānaka Maoli writing, reimagines Native Hawaiian experiences within the colonial matrix of power, and reveals Indigenous strategies of resistance and resilience. The paper examines the ways Hula depicts tropical tourism as a continuation of colonial violence, and how it foregrounds Indigenous epistemologies to counter the tourist imaginary of Hawai‘i as tropical “paradise.” It does this through a close textual analysis of Hula, cross-referenced with Aníbal Quijano’s (2000) concept of the “coloniality of power,” Walter Mignolo’s (2009) theory of “epistemic disobedience,” and ecocritical insights from Rob Nixon. The findings reveal that the novel portrays tropical tourism as a subtle extension of colonial conquest: erasing Native presence and accelerating environmental degradation. The novel simultaneously demonstrates epistemic disobedience through the preservation of authentic hula (dance form), communal storytelling, and activism against military and corporate encroachments. The study concludes that the novel disrupts the normalizing of tropical tourism by centering Native Hawaiian agency, and reframing Hawai‘i not as a consumable paradise but as a contested homeland where cultural resurgence and sovereignty remain vital.

Author Biography

Roshima Uday, Victoria College, Palakkad, Kerala, India, Affiliated with University of Calicut

Roshima Uday is a research scholar in the Department of English at Government Victoria College, Palakkad, Kerala. Her research focuses on vulnerability theory, with broader academic interests in critical cultural studies, colonial and decolonial theory, environmental humanities, and Indian and African American literature. Her scholarly contributions have earned her multiple awards for best paper presentations. She currently serves as a Member, Board of Studies in English and Media Studies (Alumni Nominee) at Sahrdaya College of Advanced Studies, Kodakara, Kerala (2025–2028), and as an Academic Counsellor at Sree Narayana Guru Open University (since October 2024). She is also a Reviewer for Mind Space, a double-blind peer-reviewed interdisciplinary academic journal published by Rani Birla Girls’ College (since November 2024), and has served as a Reviewer for the forthcoming edited volume The Liminal Beings: Vulnerability and Resilience (Vernon Press).

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Published

2026-03-04

How to Cite

Uday, R. (2026). Hawai‘i beyond Tropical Overtourism: Decolonial Perspectives on Jasmin ‘Iolani Hakes’ Hula. ETropic: Electronic Journal of Studies in the Tropics, 25(1), 81–97. https://doi.org/10.25120/etropic.25.1.2026.4283