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This Handbook will explore diverse contemporary topics that reflect the variety of heritage in Aotearoa New Zealand, with topics ranging over cultural and natural heritage, the arts and culture, GLAMs (galleries, libraries, archives and museums), public history, and the natural environment. The chapters in this book all have some relationship with people and place, or with Aotearoa New Zealand's shared history and the impact of/response to a colonial legacy. They will explore the conflict and tensions which arise in contemporary debates about postsettler history, national identity, and popular culture. Within this framework of land, Maori and settler/migrant peoples, authors consider the conflict, problems and tensions which arise from settler-colonial violence, post settler history and a fractious national identity. The book will focus on issues that connect to the relationship with indigenous people and the land through the Treaty of Waitangi/Tiriti o Waitangi. It asks: Who are we and what does it mean to live here, as tangata whenua (people of the land) and tangata tiriti (people of the Treaty)? How has our heritage shaped and been shaped by our relationship to each other and to the land?
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1. Whakaupoko/Inter-Cultural Heritage in Aotearoa New Zealand: An Introduction.- Part I: Te Whenua / Land.- Chapter 2. Te Whenua / Land: An Introduction.- Chapter 3. 1 + 1 = 3: An Introduction to Interculturalism.- Chapter 4. Nga Pakiaka Morehu o te Whenua: The Surviving Roots: Reclaiming Space Post-Treaty Settlement.- Chapter 5. Heritage and the Colonial Project.- Chapter 6. Coastal Heritage, Climate Change and Community-centred Action.- Chapter 7. Te Ara o Raukawa Moana: Active Kaitiakitanga in Response to Climate Change.- Chapter 8. Heritage, Museums, and Climate Change: A Conversation with Huhana Smith.- Chapter 9. Re-remembering Te Whanganui-a-Tara: Pukeahu National War Memorial Park.- Chapter 10. Aotearoa New Zealand s Leading Role on the World Heritage Stage: Advancing the Meaningful Participation of Indigenous Peoples and Communities.- Chapter 11. Aotearoa is My Turangawaewae : Unearthing Resistance of Banaban Youth, Displacement, and Belonging in the Pacific.- Chapter 12. Mauri and Museums: Integrating Maori Cultural Values into Museums Lessons from Environmental Management.-Part II: Taonga, Objects, Knowledges and Practices.- Chapter 13. Taonga, Objects, Knowledges and Practices: An Introduction.- Chapter 14. Tongan Talatupu a/Fananga: Breathing Life Into Archival Myth/Legend Collections.- Chapter 15. Ka hao te m hio hei matauranga pa tauremu / Gathering knowing and knowledge in stone fish traps: The 100th anniversary of the Dominion Museum Ethnological Expedition to Te Tairawhiti 1923.- Chapter