About this item
- Title
- Fragmentation and Restoration: Generational Legacies of 21st Century Māori
- Content partner
- University of Waikato
- Collection
- ResearchCommons@Waikato
- Description
The content of this thesis is premised on a reflexive examination of some historical juxtapositions culminating in critical aspects of being Māori in the twenty first century and how such aspects have informed contemporary indigenous identity. That is, the continuing acknowledgement and exponential public recognition of critical concepts which inextricably link indigenous and civic identity. The theoretical sources for this research are, in the main, derived from anthropological and religious...
- Format
- Research paper
- Research format
- Thesis
- Thesis level
- Masters
- Date created
- 2009
- Creator
- Malcolm-Buchanan, Vincent Alan
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/10289/2797
- Related subjects
- Maori / Pakeha / Aotearoa / New Zealand / Te Ao Maori / intergenerational / nation building / diffused / Christian / Ratana / Te Arawa / Tuhoe / Ngati Pikiao / Ngati Whare / spatial / temporal / historical juxtapositions / myth / oral histories / indigenous knowledge / ideologies / pre-literate society / pre-contact / Maori worldview / autochthonous / New Zealand Waitangi Tribunal / whaikorero / whakapapa / marae / whanau / hapu / iwi / ethnocentrism / institutional marginalisation / discrimination / post-colonial / kinship / generational / continuity / dis-continuity / fragmentation / restoration / universals / historical redress / oral transmission / knowledge transfer / social control / icocnoclasm / religion / anthropology / history / cultural memory / eponymous / unified / transitional / stratified
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Report this itemDigitalNZ brings together more than 30 million items from institutions so that they are easy to find and use. This information is the best information we could find on this item. This item was added on 21 April 2012, and updated 10 September 2024.
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