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Beginning with the Treaty of Waitangi, this paper looks at significant events and issues in the shaping of contemporary New Zealand society. Topics include: Colonisation: arrival of Europeans, Musket Wars, Treaty of Waitangi, alienation of land, NZ Wars, population decimation. 20th Century Recovery: Price of Citizenship, Maori Battalion, assimilation, racism. Renaissance: urbanisation, activism, Waitangi Tribunal. Revitalisation of culture: language, kapa haka, education, health, business, radio, television, film, sport. Current issues: Treaty settlements, tribal development, leadership, self-determination, indigenous human rights, biculturalism, multi-culturalism and identity
This course will provide an insight into Māori society in a time of change. Subjects will include changes to Māori society in the post-Treaty period. Impacts of a changing demographic on Māori, urbanisation and citizenship issues faced by a people who after the Treaty became citizens in a country they had inhabited for 800 years. The course will also follow the effects of assimilation and integration into a westernised civilisation over a period which begins with the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840 and ends in present day New Zealand society.
Goals of the Course:The goals of the course are to introduce students to: Colonisation of Māori: arrival of European explorers, missionaries and traders, disease, Musket Wars, Treaty of Waitangi, alienation of land, New Zealand Wars, Kings,prophets, guerrilla warfare, pacifism, population decimation. 20th Century Recovery: price of citizenship, sacrifice of the Māori Battalion, assimilation, racism. Renaissance: urbanisation, youth protest, Waitangi Tribunal. Revitalisation of culture: language, kapa haka, education, health, business, radio, television, film, sport. New identities: Māori pan-tribalism, neo-tribalism, hybridity, cosmopolites and other emerging identities. Current issues: Treaty settlements, tribal development, leadership, self-determination, globalisation, Indigenous human rights, Pakeha backlash, biculturalism and multi-culturalism.By the end of the course students will have: developed an appreciation of the Treaty and its impact on Māori explored how the Treaty has helped shaped race relations in Aotearoa - New Zealand considered the historical, social, cultural, political and contemporary implications of the Treaty. discussed various forms of cultural encounter underpinned by the Treaty and its principles considered and evaluated their own pre-conceived perceptions about the Treaty and Māori
MAOR113 (prior to 2006)
Garrick Cooper
Domestic fee $670.00
International fee $2,850.00
* All fees are inclusive of NZ GST or any equivalent overseas tax, and do not include any programme level discount or additional course-related expenses.
For further information see Aotahi School of Maori and Indigenous Studies .