The Role of Checkers (Jekab) in the Marshall Islands

Authors

Keywords:

checkers (jekab), board games, social lubricant, anthropology of play, Marshall Islands, Micronesia

Abstract

The Marshall Islands have an active community of competitive players of checkers (jekab) who use a rule set that is particular to the region. This game is featured in tournaments held during cultural celebrations on multiple islands in the archipelago, while the activity is considered an integral part of public life as it is witnessed on the islands. Marshallese checkers is shown to create a liminoid space in which a diversity of players in terms of age, language and socioeconomic circumstances interact across the playing board. Marshallese checkers supports the idea of board games as social lubricants that helps to explain how board games cross these borders so effortlessly historically as well as contemporaneously. The public presence, the rules and the diversity of players exhibited in the Marshall Islands point to a rich history of and a continuing future for abstract board games in the Pacific Islands.

Author Biography

Alex de Voogt, Drew University

Alex de Voogt, Associate Professor at Drew University (USA), is a 1993 graduate of the Pacific Islands Studies Program at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa. His research on board games started in East Africa and quickly expanded to other regions. With a specific interest in master players, he published on the psychology of board games before looking at historical processes through extensive fieldwork and archaeological surveys. He co-authored the book Ancient Egyptians at Play in 2016 (Bloomsbury), which brings together leading insights in the archaeology of board games. He is one of the founders of the Board Game Studies Journal and initiated the annual Board Game Studies Colloquium.

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Published

2020-09-29