This book focuses on the life of Dr. Augustin Friedrich Krämer (1865-1941) a key figure among
early ethnologists of the Pacific. As a naval physician and naturalist and later as an
ethnologist Krämer visited the region several times. Between 1893 and 1911 he participated in
and became involved in five different and far-ranging expeditions to the Pacific. In the course
of these expeditions Krämer developed a keen interest in the peoples and cultures of Oceania.
This interest was reflected not only in numerous publications and artifact collections on this
region but also in a lifelong preoccupation with ethnology in general. The latter led to his
becoming scientific director of the Linden Museum in Stuttgart in 1911 and later lecturer in
ethnology and founder of the Ethnological Institute at the University of Tübingen in 1931. As
such Krämer can be considered a pioneer of ethnology. However while Krämer's work is still
held in high regard by Pacific Islanders and scholars interested in Oceania his life and work
in the Pacific has escaped wider attention. This fate also applies to Krämer's contribution to
the development of ethnology as a scientific discipline in Germany. By focusing on Krämer's
travels and research in the Pacific this book aims to offer a deeper understanding of the
genesis and value of what he left behind. In doing so it will also reassess the German
contribution to ethnological knowledge of Oceania. It is thus a case study of the contribution
of a German ethnologist to the broader history of the discipline and explores the intersection
of scholarly endeavor and colonial reality.