Once Were Pacific
Maori Connections to Oceania
Explores the relationship between indigeneity and migration among Māori and Pacific peoples
Details
Once Were Pacific
Maori Connections to Oceania
ISBN: 9780816677573
Publication date: April 11th, 2012
288 Pages
8 x 5
"Alice Te Punga Somerville’s Once Were Pacific is the first major study of how Māori and Pacific people talk to each other in Aotearoa/New Zealand and Oceania. It is a splendid book, remarkably lucid, insightful, comprehensive, and accessible."—Albert Wendt, author of Leaves of the Banyan Tree
"Once Were Pacific will help us to push beyond orthodox understandings of complex and contemporary Indigenous identities and representational practices through rigorous scholarship that is Māori focused."—Chadwick Allen, Ohio State University
"Alice Te Punga Somverville has writtem a scintillating text that explores the relationship between Maori and our Pacific forebears... "—Ella Henry, Interface
"Critical yet imaginative, formalist, and specifically indigenist, the analyses throughout this work are informative, entertaining, and engaging. Ultimately, Once Were Pacific explores works and spaces never before addressed critically."—College Literature
"Alice Te Punga Somerville has contributed an outstanding and challenging text to contemporary literary studies in Aotearoa and beyond. With new readings of existing texts, Once Were Pacific offers an impressive depth of analysis about the trade in cultural identity that has evolved in the Polynesian world. This book should be read repeatedly for the insights and understandings the author has carefully presented in its pages."—Journal of New Zealand Literature
"Concerned with webs of connections and disconnections across a life as migrants, Once Were Pacific is a literary study of Māori writers writing in English in and across an ocean of islands."—American Quarterly
Native identity is usually associated with a particular place. But what if that place is the ocean? Once Were Pacific explores this question as it considers how Māori and other Pacific peoples frame their connection to the ocean, to New Zealand, and to each other through various creative works. Māori scholar Alice Te Punga Somerville shows how and when Māori and other Pacific peoples articulate their ancestral history as migratory seafarers, drawing their identity not only from land but also from water.
Although Māori are ethnically Polynesian, and Aotearoa New Zealand is clearly a part of the Pacific region, in New Zealand the terms “Māori” and “Pacific” are colloquially applied to two distinct communities: Māori are Indigenous, and “Pacific” refers to migrant communities from elsewhere in the region. Asking how this distinction might blur historical and contemporary connections, Te Punga Somerville interrogates the relationship between indigeneity, migration, and diaspora, focusing on texts: poetry, fiction, theater, film, and music, viewed alongside historical instances of performance, journalism, and scholarship.
In this sustained treatment of the Māori diaspora, Te Punga Somerville provides the first critical analysis of relationships between Indigenous and migrant communities in New Zealand.
Alice Te Punga Somerville (Te Ātiawa) is senior lecturer at Victoria University of Wellington, where she teaches Māori, Pacific, and Indigenous writing in English.
Contents
Ngā Mihi: Acknowledgments
Introduction: Māori and the Pacific
Part I. Tapa: Aotearoa in the Pacific Region
1. Māori People in Pacific Spaces
2. Pacific-Based Māori Writers
3. Aotearoa-Based Māori Writers
The Realm of Tapa
Part II. Koura: The Pacific in Aotearoa
4. Māori–Pasifika Collaborations
5. “It’s like that with us Maoris”: Māori Write Connections
6. Manuhiri, Fānau: Pasifika Write Connections
7. When Romeo Met Tusi: Disconnections
The Realm of Koura
Conclusion: E Kore Au e Ngaro
Epilogue: A Time and a Place
Notes
Publication History
Index