Maranga mai! : te reo and marae in crisis? / edited by Merata Kawharu.
Material type: TextPublisher: Auckland : Auckland University Press, 2014Description: 258 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of colour plates : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781869408053
- Reo and marae in crisis?
- 306.4408999442 23
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | City Campus City Campus Main Collection | DISPLAY 306.4408999442 MAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | A528993B | ||
Book | City Campus City Campus Main Collection | 306.4408999442 MAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | A528991B |
Browsing City Campus shelves, Shelving location: City Campus Main Collection Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
DISPLAY 306.30995 HAU We are the ocean : selected works / | DISPLAY 306.440899442 HEP Pakeha identity and Maori language and culture : bicultural identity and language in New Zealand / | DISPLAY 306.4408999442 CLE Papers on language / | DISPLAY 306.4408999442 MAR Maranga mai! : te reo and marae in crisis? / | DISPLAY 306.4408999442 NUR The nurturing shield : a collection of essays on the Māori language / | DISPLAY 306.460993 PHI A history of New Zealand in 100 objects / | DISPLAY 306.483 SPO Sport, dance and embodied identities / |
"From the time of the Māori renaissance of the 1970s and 1980s, Māori made huge efforts to reinvigorate te reo and the life of marae as the twin cornerstones of Māori identity. Māori television and radio stations were set up, the Māori Language Commission established and kōhanga reo, kura kaupapa and wānanga emerged. Old marae gained new coats of paint and new marae were established on sites ranging from urban university campuses to rural communities. But have the efforts really worked? Now, in 2013, are te reo and marae in crisis? The number of children in kōhanga reo is down 34 per cent from its peak. Only 15 per cent of Māori children are attending Māori-medium schooling. And fewer and fewer people are participating in marae activities. Without a living language spoken regularly on the marae, what is the future for Māori culture? Focusing on Tai Tokerau, the northern region of New Zealand, as a case study but with conclusions applicable across the country, the leading Māori scholars and elders in Maranga Mai! call for their people to wake up to these challenges. Through stories and statistics, demography and policy, they identify the key issues and pose potential solutions"--Publisher's information.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Ko te rere o te reo -- The decline of the language / Merimeri Penfold -- 2. Tribal marae: Crisis? What crisis? / Paul Tapsell -- 3. Te memeha haere o ngā kaikōrero tohunga ki runga i ngā marae -- The dearth of competent speakers on the marae / Hone Sadler -- 4. Te reo Māori and Māori identity: what's in a maunga? / Arapera Ngaha -- 5. Motutī road: at the end of the road, or just the beginning? / Kevin Robinson -- 6. Te reo Māori and schooling / Margie Hohepa -- 7. Auē, taukiri ē: the changing face of marae / Fraser Toi -- 8. Te reo Māori and the tamariki of Te Tai Tokerau: a twenty-first century demography / Stephen McTaggart -- 9. Renaissance and re-engagement: a Rangatahi perspective / Kiri Toki -- 10. Casting a new net: connecting marae and te reo in the information age / Merata Kawharu, with Paratene Tane -- 11. Made of many threads: identity as a vibrant tapestry / Pounamu Jade Aikman-Dodd -- 12. Ngā taonga kōrero and the modern world / Michael Hennessy.
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