Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Te Whare Kōrero
View through CrossRef
<p><strong>Kia ū ki tou kāwai tīpuna, Kia mātauria ai, I ahu mai koe ihea, e anga ana koe ko hea.</strong></p>
<p>Trace out your ancestral stem, so that it may be known where you come from and where you are going. (He Māori ahau: I am Māori, 2015).</p>
<p>This thesis is a restoration project for myself to reconnect with my cultural identity as an urban Māori. I hope it may also offer value to other urban Māori, especially tauira, to build the courage to explore their Māoritanga throughout their area of work or education.</p>
<p>Identities are the foundations of this research project. I am a descendant of Ngāti Porou, and although this background ultimately underlies everything I make, do, and write, it is not the objective of this research project to be limited to any one iwi perspective. This research project is for all dislocated urban Māori to come together and reconnect with their cultural identity in the urban environment. It is essential to acknowledge the politics that influence culture and the social, multicultural, and colonial forces that construct and change individual cultural identities because Māori culture is highly diverse. While I acknowledge that most interview participants are affiliated with Ngāti Porou and myself, this is due to already established relationships and the given timeframe of a master’s level thesis. The rangahau/research aims to understand the transition to the urban environment through an architectural lens as opposed to visualising Ngāti Porou identity in the urban environment. Everyone perceives identity and architecture differently; this rangahau aims not to make Māori identity seem generalised but rather embrace the commonalities of identity and architecture.</p>
<p>This research project intends to highlight the essence of contemporary Māori identity by unpacking and understanding whakawhanaungatanga through an interior architectural lens. Whakawhanaungatanga is explored through an architectural lens of a design investigation at Papa’s whare/house, 85 Bird Grove in Stokes Valley, a state house style built in 1968. To visualise whakawhanaungatanga within interior architecture, the research project investigates the potential of whakapapa as a method for making and rethinking the way we design a kāinga/home as opposed to a whare. Through layered explorations, “Whakapapa of Potential” concludes an outcome of a nuclear whānau/family domestic interior. The focus is to weave and layer research and design to create spaces for gathering, discussions, learning, engaging and belonging, thus encouraging whakawhanaungatanga.</p>
<p>Along with the academic outcomes of this thesis, I have had the greatest gift of creating and maintaining reciprocal relationships with my whakapapa connections, deepening whanaungatanga.</p>
Title: Te Whare Kōrero
Description:
<p><strong>Kia ū ki tou kāwai tīpuna, Kia mātauria ai, I ahu mai koe ihea, e anga ana koe ko hea.
</strong></p>
<p>Trace out your ancestral stem, so that it may be known where you come from and where you are going.
(He Māori ahau: I am Māori, 2015).
</p>
<p>This thesis is a restoration project for myself to reconnect with my cultural identity as an urban Māori.
I hope it may also offer value to other urban Māori, especially tauira, to build the courage to explore their Māoritanga throughout their area of work or education.
</p>
<p>Identities are the foundations of this research project.
I am a descendant of Ngāti Porou, and although this background ultimately underlies everything I make, do, and write, it is not the objective of this research project to be limited to any one iwi perspective.
This research project is for all dislocated urban Māori to come together and reconnect with their cultural identity in the urban environment.
It is essential to acknowledge the politics that influence culture and the social, multicultural, and colonial forces that construct and change individual cultural identities because Māori culture is highly diverse.
While I acknowledge that most interview participants are affiliated with Ngāti Porou and myself, this is due to already established relationships and the given timeframe of a master’s level thesis.
The rangahau/research aims to understand the transition to the urban environment through an architectural lens as opposed to visualising Ngāti Porou identity in the urban environment.
Everyone perceives identity and architecture differently; this rangahau aims not to make Māori identity seem generalised but rather embrace the commonalities of identity and architecture.
</p>
<p>This research project intends to highlight the essence of contemporary Māori identity by unpacking and understanding whakawhanaungatanga through an interior architectural lens.
Whakawhanaungatanga is explored through an architectural lens of a design investigation at Papa’s whare/house, 85 Bird Grove in Stokes Valley, a state house style built in 1968.
To visualise whakawhanaungatanga within interior architecture, the research project investigates the potential of whakapapa as a method for making and rethinking the way we design a kāinga/home as opposed to a whare.
Through layered explorations, “Whakapapa of Potential” concludes an outcome of a nuclear whānau/family domestic interior.
The focus is to weave and layer research and design to create spaces for gathering, discussions, learning, engaging and belonging, thus encouraging whakawhanaungatanga.
</p>
<p>Along with the academic outcomes of this thesis, I have had the greatest gift of creating and maintaining reciprocal relationships with my whakapapa connections, deepening whanaungatanga.
</p>.
Related Results
Te matakite - Te kupu whakaari
Te matakite - Te kupu whakaari
Ko te whāinga o tēnei tuhinga poto he matapaki i te matakite me te kupu whakaari, arā, he whakatakoto i tētahi tūāpapa kōrero e mārama ai te kaipānui ki te tikanga o ēnei kaupapa e...
Layered Pasts: Cultural Heritage Landscapes in Cities
Layered Pasts: Cultural Heritage Landscapes in Cities
<p>This thesis aims to understand how indigenous heritage values might be represented in post-colonial urban environments. Using an urban design and landscape architecture le...
Te whare tapa whā: The impact of physical distancing on the health and well-being of kuia and koroheke
Te whare tapa whā: The impact of physical distancing on the health and well-being of kuia and koroheke
The effects of the COVID-19 lockdown and physical distancing were broad, impacting multiple sectors, particularly health, for Māori and Indigenous peoples. This situation report co...
Tu Kaha: Nga Mana Wahine Exploring the Role of Mana Wahine in the Development of Te Whare Rokiroki Maori Women's Refuge
Tu Kaha: Nga Mana Wahine Exploring the Role of Mana Wahine in the Development of Te Whare Rokiroki Maori Women's Refuge
<p>Whanau are the building blocks of society and their well-being is critical to strong,vibrant and connected communities. When a women or child is beaten, abused, or worse k...
A View of Jungian Analysis in Aotearoa New Zealand
A View of Jungian Analysis in Aotearoa New Zealand
This paper traces something of the Jungian presence in Aotearoa New Zealand from the late 1930s through the formal association of Jungian analysts in the late 1970s to the present ...
Te kākahu whakataratara o Ngāi Tūhoe: Ko te reo ōkawa, ko te reo o te marae
Te kākahu whakataratara o Ngāi Tūhoe: Ko te reo ōkawa, ko te reo o te marae
Ko te reo ōkawa ara ko te reo o te marae, he reo hōhonu. Ka mutu, he tapu katoa ōna āhuatanga katoa. E rua ngā kōrero whakatau o runga i te marae. Ko te karanga me te whaikōrero. K...
Tūwhitia Te Hopo, Mairangatia Te Angitū
Tūwhitia Te Hopo, Mairangatia Te Angitū
Tokohia kē nei ngā tāngata e whai ana, e ako ana i te reo Māori ka patua tonutia, ka whakatekotekotia anō e tēnei mea rongonui, e te whakamā? I ēnei rā, ko te nuinga o ngā pakeke e...
Positivism and Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy
Positivism and Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy
Through the lens of Mark Thorpe’s thought provoking research summary on projective identification, this commentary briefly explores the growing need for psychoanalytic, and psychoa...

