Hawaii Project

Since 2016, our research team has been working on some major documents left in Hawaii by members of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM). For the purpose of exploring the language of 19th-century American missionaries, we have so far compiled the ABCFM Hawaii Corpus (hereafter Hawaii Corpus), which consists of selected documents (journals, letters, and an autobiography) in the Hawaiian Mission Children’s Society Library. More specifically, the corpus includes:

  • Levi Chamberlain (1792-1849), 228,500 words (journals)
  • Lorrin Andrews (1795–1868), 24,100 words (journals)
  • Peter Johnson Gulick (1796-1877), 55,800 words (autobiography)
  • Dwight Baldwin (1798–1886), 139,900 words (journals)
  • Elisha Loomis (1799-1836), 29,300 words (journals)
  • Maria (Patton) Chamberlain (1803-1880), 69,500 words (journals)
  • Richard Armstrong (1805-1860), 24,500 words (journals)
  • Clarissa Chapman Armstrong (1805-1891), 81,500 words (journals and letters)

Total: 653,100 words (vers. 1.2)

Presentations

  • Moriya, Akira and Yoko Iyeiri. 2020. “The Be/Have-Perfect in 19th-Century American English: A Corpus-Based Analysis of Some Missionary Documents in Hawaii”. JAECS2020, 3 October 2020, Online.
  • Iyeiri, Yoko and Mariko Fukunaga. 2020. “A Corpus-based Analysis of Negation in Some 19th-century American Missionary Documents in Honolulu”. ICAME 41, 20-23 May 2020, Heidelberg (online).
  • Iyeiri, Yoko, Mariko Fukunaga, and Akira Moriya. 2020. “Compiling the Hawaii Corpus and Some Linguistic Case Studies”. Workshop on “Christian documents in the Asia-Pacific region and their use”, held at Kyoto University. 1 January 2020.

    Publication(s)