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In this richly illustrated book, Maori scholars and writers share the traditional knowledge passed down the generations by word of mouth. It provides a unique window on the relationship of the people of this land with their environment, as well as the profound knowledge and neces ...
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The Native Land Court 1862-1887: A Historical Study, Cases and Commentary is the first ever authoritative published selection of the Native Land Court's principal decisions. It contains a full introduction explaining the history of the Court and contains over 100 principal cases ...
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KA MAU TE WEHI provides a unique insight through the biography of Bub and Nen into the development and promotion of kapa haka throughout NZ and in particular primary and secondary schools.
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The life of an ex-Mongrel Mob gang leader.
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Grounded in an ethnography of everyday life in the city of Auckland, Being Maori in the City is an investigation of what being Maori means today.
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The first paperback edition of this classic A.W. Reed title remains true to the original vision - to create a highly accessible reference to the traditional life and customs of Maori. Taonga Tuku Iho translates to 'treasures from the past that have been handed down to us'. Thi ...
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The study began as an inquiry into traditional and contemporary understandings of whanaungatanga. The author initially conceptualised whanaungatanga as our interconnectedness with each other and the land. Between 2003 and 2007 she collected whanau stories, traced whakapapa and st ...
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The Meeting Place is an examination of relationships between Maori and Pakeha focusing predominantly on the period between 1814 and 1840 when, author Vincent O'Malley argues, both peoples lived / inhabited a 'middle ground' - in the historian's Richard White's phrase - in which n ...
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All of the essays are about identity and there is a sense in which some older essays are being brought up to date with recent literature especially theses written since 2010.
Dance and Identity in Aotearoa and the world is about performance, and identity. Some of the later essa ...
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At last our story is told. Now the brave ancestors we have hidden for so long stand again for all to see.With these words the Elders of Waitaha tell us that their ancient and sacred lore is shared for the first time. Bound in secrecy for centuries, protec
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