He reo tuku iho : tangata whenua and te reo Māori / Awanui Te Huia.
Material type: TextPublisher: Wellington [New Zealand] : Te Herenga Waka University Press, 2022Copyright date: ©2022Description: 248 pages : illustrations ; 21 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781776920174
- 1776920171
- Tangata whenua and te reo Māori
- 305.899442 23
- PL6465 .T44 2022
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | City Campus City Campus Main Collection | 305.899442 TEH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Ordered | |||
Book | South Campus South Campus Main Collection | DISPLAY 305.899442 TEH (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Issued | 20/11/2024 | A582228B |
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DISPLAY 300.072 SIL Interpreting qualitative data / | DISPLAY 305.899 REL The relational self : decolonising personhood in the Pacific / | DISPLAY 305.899 REL Relational hermeneutics : decolonising the mindset and the Pacific itulagi / | DISPLAY 305.899442 TEH He reo tuku iho : tangata whenua and te reo Māori / | DISPLAY 305.899442 WAL Marae : te tatau pounamu : a journey around New Zealand's meeting houses / | DISPLAY 306.09961 HOW Island legacy : a history of the Rotuman people / | DISPLAY 323.092 TEA Hine toa : a story of bravery / |
Includes bibliographical references.
Methods and methodology -- Practical support for learning te reo -- Benefits of ancestral language learning -- Historical trauma and language acquisition -- Encountering barriers -- Ko ngā tūhonogna: the importance of interpersonal relationships -- Te reo Māori i te kāinga: whānau reo Māori -- Māori at home and within whānau -- Kia tangata whenua anō ai te reo Māori -- creating a shift in societal perceptions and behaviours -- What does it all mean for tangata whenua who are learning te reo Māori.
Reclaiming a language is a slow-burning process, both deeply personal and intricately connected to the socio-economic, historical and political conditions in which we live. In He reo tuku iho: Tangata whenua and te reo Māori, Awanui Te Huia focuses on the lived experiences of tangata whenua and explores ways in which they can reclaim te reo. Drawing upon !ndings from the national research project Manawa u ki te reo Māori, which surveyed motivations and barriers for Māori language acquisition and use, Te Huia encourages readers to explore how they can journey back towards te reo Māori in daily life. We hear from tangata whenua learning te reo, and from those who are fluent, while considering challenges to language reclamation - such as experiences with racism, whakama, historical trauma and resourcing - and ways to overcome these. At the heart of He reo tuku iho is the knowledge that it is possible for Māori to return te reo to minds, hearts and mouths.
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