Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Kia Vai Rai Auraka Kia Taui‘ia - Let it remain, Let it change: Negotiations of religion among Cook Island Māori in New Zealand

View through CrossRef
<p><strong>This thesis examines how Cook Island Māori in contemporary New Zealand negotiate religion. It does so through a qualitative study, based on in-depth conversations with ten Cook Island Māori. The conversations reveal a complex social and relational dynamic to the ways in which Cook Island Māori understand and navigate religion. I argue that the Cook Island Māori in this research negotiate religion in a socialised manner that seeks to make sense of Christianity’s relationship with Cook Island Māori culture. To understand the ways in which this socialised negotiation of religion occurs, I employ the Cook Island Māori relational methodology, ‘akapapa‘anga, and draw from recent scholarship examining the discursive construction of religion. Through this approach, I identified three ‘modes of sociality’ which I name ‘Religion Affirmed,’ ‘Religion Redescribed,’ and ‘Religion Unsettled.’ Each mode captures the different and distinct ways in which these Cook Island Māori are negotiating what religion signifies for them, trying to make sense of Christianity’s relationship to Cook Island Māori culture, and navigating broader social obligations towards family and their community. Sitting underneath these socialised negotiations of religion is the impact of colonisation on Cook Island Māori people and culture. The impact of colonisation is contested due to implications to personal, social, and historical agency. This thesis demonstrates that the meaning of ‘religion,’ what constitutes Cook Island Māori culture, and the importance of different social relationships, are contested. It also indicates the centrality of ‘akapapa‘anga in the negotiation of these differences, the ongoing significance of Christianity in shaping diverse understandings of religion for Cook Island Māori, and the fruitfulness of relational epistemologies for the social scientific study of Pacific religion today.</strong></p>
Victoria University of Wellington Library
Title: Kia Vai Rai Auraka Kia Taui‘ia - Let it remain, Let it change: Negotiations of religion among Cook Island Māori in New Zealand
Description:
<p><strong>This thesis examines how Cook Island Māori in contemporary New Zealand negotiate religion.
It does so through a qualitative study, based on in-depth conversations with ten Cook Island Māori.
The conversations reveal a complex social and relational dynamic to the ways in which Cook Island Māori understand and navigate religion.
I argue that the Cook Island Māori in this research negotiate religion in a socialised manner that seeks to make sense of Christianity’s relationship with Cook Island Māori culture.
To understand the ways in which this socialised negotiation of religion occurs, I employ the Cook Island Māori relational methodology, ‘akapapa‘anga, and draw from recent scholarship examining the discursive construction of religion.
Through this approach, I identified three ‘modes of sociality’ which I name ‘Religion Affirmed,’ ‘Religion Redescribed,’ and ‘Religion Unsettled.
’ Each mode captures the different and distinct ways in which these Cook Island Māori are negotiating what religion signifies for them, trying to make sense of Christianity’s relationship to Cook Island Māori culture, and navigating broader social obligations towards family and their community.
Sitting underneath these socialised negotiations of religion is the impact of colonisation on Cook Island Māori people and culture.
The impact of colonisation is contested due to implications to personal, social, and historical agency.
This thesis demonstrates that the meaning of ‘religion,’ what constitutes Cook Island Māori culture, and the importance of different social relationships, are contested.
It also indicates the centrality of ‘akapapa‘anga in the negotiation of these differences, the ongoing significance of Christianity in shaping diverse understandings of religion for Cook Island Māori, and the fruitfulness of relational epistemologies for the social scientific study of Pacific religion today.
</strong></p>.

Related Results

Māori Art and Architecture
Māori Art and Architecture
Maori art history originates in Te Po/The Darkness when the parents Ranginui/Sky Father and Papatūānuku/Earth Mother were joined. They were later separated by some of their sons wh...
Understanding the Māori Television Service’s Policy and Legislation: The First Ten Years
Understanding the Māori Television Service’s Policy and Legislation: The First Ten Years
<p>he Māori Television Service emerged in 2004 after many years of political agitation by Māori for the New Zealand government to protect and promote Māori language and cultu...
Pengaruh Sosialisasi Buku KIA Terhadap Pengetahuan Ibu Hamil Tentang Buku KIA
Pengaruh Sosialisasi Buku KIA Terhadap Pengetahuan Ibu Hamil Tentang Buku KIA
ABSTRACT The implementation of the MCH Handbook is still not optimal, there are still many mothers, families, health workers, and cadres who have not carried out the things that sh...
Reo Rua (Two Voices): a cross-cultural Māori-non-Māori creative collaboration
Reo Rua (Two Voices): a cross-cultural Māori-non-Māori creative collaboration
In the last decades, there has been an emergence of an academic discourse called Indigenous knowledge internationally, creating a myriad of possibilities for research led by creati...
Tika Tonu: Young Māori Mothers' Experiences of Wellbeing Surrounding the Birth of their First Tamaiti
Tika Tonu: Young Māori Mothers' Experiences of Wellbeing Surrounding the Birth of their First Tamaiti
<p>The wellbeing experiences of young Māori mothers’ (ngā māmā) surrounding the birth of their first tamaiti and the impact of those experiences, often determine outcomes for...
An exploration of the maternity experiences of Wāhine Māori in their encounters with midwife Lead Maternity Carers
An exploration of the maternity experiences of Wāhine Māori in their encounters with midwife Lead Maternity Carers
The purpose of this research was to explore the maternity experiences of Māori women to understand the optimal conditions needed to provide women-centred relationships with midwife...
Māori and English in New Zealand toponyms
Māori and English in New Zealand toponyms
This paper takes up one of the conference themes, «Reflection of language contacts in proper names». It deals with the situation in New Zealand where there are some 12,000 gazetted...
Audiological and Surgical Correlates of Myringoplasty Associated with Ethnography in the Bay of Plenty, New Zealand
Audiological and Surgical Correlates of Myringoplasty Associated with Ethnography in the Bay of Plenty, New Zealand
<b><i>Introduction:</i></b> This retrospective cohort study of myringoplasty performed at Tauranga Hospital, Bay of Plenty, New Zealand from 2010 to 2020 so...

Back to Top