Le'o o e Pasifiki = Voices of the Pacific / written by Palmerston North Pasifika students ; foreword, editing and zine layout by Feana Tu'akoi ; cover art by Sontel Liuvaie ; cover design, Fisher Print.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: [Palmerston North, New Zealand] : [Massey University School of Humanities, Media and Creative Communication], [2022]Description: 42 pages : illustrations ; 21 cmContent type:
  • text
  • still image
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
Other title:
  • Voices of the Pacific [Parallel title]
  • Voices of the Pacific
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 808.899282 23
Online resources:
Contents:
Creative writing by: 'Ana Palelei (Poem ; Funerals) -- Amazing Fa'atasi (Poem ; Sāmoan Easter) -- Camille Togisia (Poem ; Art) -- Celia Hala (Poem ; Emperor's rule) -- Daniel Fuafiva (Poem ; Six inch centipede) -- Esther Folaumoeloa (Poem ; Tau'olunga) -- Fonotele Lokeni (Poem ; Developing confidence) -- Kalisolaite Fonongaloa (Poem ; White Sunday) -- Kilauea Petero (Poem ; Tokelau Language Week) -- Laifone Liuvaie (Poem ; TauToa Niue) -- Liam Qiokata (Poem ; First Cook Island holiday) -- Sontel Liuvaie (Poem ; Nena's 80th) -- Vallene Banga (Poem ; The eldest child) -- Vea Folaumoeloa (Poem ; A Tongan kid).
Summary: "Story is vital. It carries the collective experience of humanity and expresses and shapes who we are. When our own four children were pre-schoolers, nearly all children's books were Pālangi-centric. I couldn't find any that included Tongan characters, Tongan ideas, Tongan situations, or even Tongan legends. As far as books were concerned, kids like ours didn't exist. I feel strongly that all readers should be able to see themselves represented in print; to access stories about people and situations that make sense to them; to understand that their stories matter. This zine, produced as part of my time as 2022 Massey University Writer in Residence, in conjunction with the Palmerston North City Council and Square Edge Community Arts, seeks in some small way to redress the balance. It confirms, to a group of Palmerston North Pasifika intermediate students, that their stories do indeed matter and that we want to read them. My hope is that it may also encourage some to become our writers of the future. Not all of these stories discuss Pasifika experiences directly, but all are told with a Pasifika world view. Enjoy!"--Foreword by Feana Tu'akoi Massey University Writer in Residence 2022.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 808.899282 LEO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available A566479B
Book South Campus South Campus Main Collection 808.899282 LEO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available A566475B

Coloured illustrations of the flags of Tonga, Samoa, Tokelau, Niue, Fiji and Cook Islands on page 3 of cover.

Creative writing by: 'Ana Palelei (Poem ; Funerals) -- Amazing Fa'atasi (Poem ; Sāmoan Easter) -- Camille Togisia (Poem ; Art) -- Celia Hala (Poem ; Emperor's rule) -- Daniel Fuafiva (Poem ; Six inch centipede) -- Esther Folaumoeloa (Poem ; Tau'olunga) -- Fonotele Lokeni (Poem ; Developing confidence) -- Kalisolaite Fonongaloa (Poem ; White Sunday) -- Kilauea Petero (Poem ; Tokelau Language Week) -- Laifone Liuvaie (Poem ; TauToa Niue) -- Liam Qiokata (Poem ; First Cook Island holiday) -- Sontel Liuvaie (Poem ; Nena's 80th) -- Vallene Banga (Poem ; The eldest child) -- Vea Folaumoeloa (Poem ; A Tongan kid).

"Story is vital. It carries the collective experience of humanity and expresses and shapes who we are. When our own four children were pre-schoolers, nearly all children's books were Pālangi-centric. I couldn't find any that included Tongan characters, Tongan ideas, Tongan situations, or even Tongan legends. As far as books were concerned, kids like ours didn't exist. I feel strongly that all readers should be able to see themselves represented in print; to access stories about people and situations that make sense to them; to understand that their stories matter. This zine, produced as part of my time as 2022 Massey University Writer in Residence, in conjunction with the Palmerston North City Council and Square Edge Community Arts, seeks in some small way to redress the balance. It confirms, to a group of Palmerston North Pasifika intermediate students, that their stories do indeed matter and that we want to read them. My hope is that it may also encourage some to become our writers of the future. Not all of these stories discuss Pasifika experiences directly, but all are told with a Pasifika world view. Enjoy!"--Foreword by Feana Tu'akoi Massey University Writer in Residence 2022.

Title from cover.

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