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Chiefly legends and myths to illustrate Maori customs, but also contains lengthy indexes of proper names, natural objects, etc.
Your Taranaki Maori is one of the most stubborn, one of the proudest, and most intelligent of the Maori race. - Sir Apirana Ngata, letter to John Houston 21 April 1936 The most authoritative account of Maori customary practices and history of the region, Maori Life in Old Taranaki contains more than 30 chapters of material which ranges over topics such as migratory canoe stories, the origins of place names, proverbs and sayings, karakia and waiata, Hauhauism and traditional lore as well as indepth coverage of the armed conflict that rent Taranaki asunder during the nineteenth century. .
"The Long White Cloud: "Ao Tea Roa"" by William Pember Reeves is a history of New Zealand that focuses particularly on the Maori people and their struggle against the Pakeha, the European settlers and gold-seekers who come to the area on the hunt for adventure. The aims of the colony's founders and the democratic experiments of those who came after them are also described to show the conflicted history of this beautiful country.
This critical examination of Maoriland literature argues against the former glib dismissals of the period and focuses instead on the era’s importance in the birth of a distinct New Zealand style of writing. By connecting the literature and other cultural forms of Maoriland to the larger realms of empire and contemporary criticism, this study explores the roots of the country’s modern feminism, progressive social legislation, and bicultural relations.
Galleries of Maoriland introduces us to the many ways in which European colonists to New Zealand discovered, created, propagated, and romanticised the Maori world summed up in a popular nickname describing New Zealand; Maoriland. But Blackley shows that Maori were not merely passive victims: they too had a stake in this process of romanticisation. What, this book asks, were some of the Maori purposes that were served by curio displays, portrait collections, and the wider ethnological culture? Galleries of Maoriland looks at Maori prehistory in European art; the enthusiasm of settlers and Maori for portraiture and recreations of ancient life; the trade in Maori curios; and the international exhibition of this colonial culture. By illuminating New Zealand's artistic and ethnographic economy, this book provides a new understanding of our art and our culture.