Prize for Best First Book from the Native American and Indigenous Studies Association
Once Were Pacific
Māori Connections to Oceania
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.
Background image, “A Maori Bartering a Crayfish,” drawn by Artist of the Chief Mourner, later identified as Tupaia, 1769. Source: Wikimedia Commons.
Table of Contents
Metadata
- isbn978-1-4529-7300-5
- publisherUniversity of Minnesota Press
- publisher placeMinneapolis, MN
- restrictionsPlease see the Creative Commons website for details about the restrictions associated with the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license.
- rightsCopyright 2012 by the Regents of the University of Minnesota
Once Were Pacific: Māori Connections to Oceania is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. - rights holderRegents of the University of Minnesota
- doi
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