Popular Culture Review Vol. 20, No. 1, Winter 2009 | Page 120

116 Popular Culture Review therefore, “indentured laborours” who toiled in the phosphate mines (31). After detailing something of its early history, Dennis provides a rich and vibrant account of Christmas Island as it was in July 2005 when she arrived and began her anthropological and ethnographic research program there. In “The More Than Human World of Christmas,” Chapter 2, Dennis notes that natural evolution “on the island proceeded in isolation, creating the conditions for unique animal and plant forms, which armed by sea or air over the 10 million years the island lay undisturbed, to arise and flourish” (63). The red crabs featured on the unforgettable cover of Christmas Island: An Anthropological Study receive evocative description here as creatures that are ubiquitous, unique, endemic, and red. They are fire engine, scarlet, ripe-tomato, fresh-blood red—unadulterated, bright, clear rubicund. Their carapaces are slicked with almost impossible sheen and luminescent luster after rain, during which they emerge jewel-like from cool burrows in order to deftly collect and then delicately drink rain water from their large and powerful claws (69). Without question, this passage demonstrates what Dennis means by the “sensual” as it colored her experiences of—and subsequent writing about— Christmas Island. In its excess, the experience and the writing are almost Romantic in the very best sense. Chapter 3, “Staying and Moving in Local Places,” directs attention to “how it is that locals become locals on Christmas Island and how the neighbourhoods in which they are produced have come to be as they are” (85). Not unexpectedly, perhaps, given its British heritage, early neighborhoods on Christmas Island “reflected the dominance of European habits over the island terrain,” a dominance which, in true, 21s' century, postcolonial fashion, is diminishing slowly as the multicultural ethnicity of the island’s inhabitants continues to assert itself in various and sundry forms (85-86). On Christmas Island, being (or becoming) a local “is something far too ordinary for words, which is why the state of being local is generally left unarticulated” by its inhabitants (106). The idea of locality, in this case, involves the movement in constancy, and there is ongoing movement in the apparent stasis accorded to ho me [that] comes from an ongoing sensual engagement with the sites of home in the ordinary work of creating and maintaining families, organisations, neighbourhoods, and persons and their places, homes, and memories (107). The specificity of the consideration of what it means to be a local on Christmas Island seems applicable to almost any other place in the world. (And perhaps it