Moko is still here, contrary to the widely held belief that the art and custom of moko-Maori skin adornment-had vanished from New Zealand communities. Over the last two decades an increasingly visible number of Maori have revived and renewed the practice, taking colour into their skin. As an indigenous people, re-taking moko confronts and refutes the myth of a 'dying race'. It calls on Maori to recommit to strong Maori identities, customs and traditions and challenges the viewer to re-examine their social representations of moko and moko wearers. This paper reports the resistance strategies of a group of 83 moko wearers. Strategies include (1) educating, representing and reconstructing; (2) invalidating and minimizing representations; (3) b...
Unrestricted"Expression of Identity: Maori Ta Moko and the Utilization of the Internet", examines Ta...
Traditionally Maori have been viewed as having no written form of communication prior to the Europea...
Moko patterns, mau moko, “wearing ink” is often explained as an act of remembrance, a symbol of hono...
Moko is still here, contrary to the widely held belief that the art and custom of moko-Maori skin ad...
The art of moko among the Maori of New Zealand declined soon after their contact with the Europeans ...
Until it came under serious attack from nineteenth century missionaries, ta moko was an integral par...
Until it came under serious attack from nineteenth century missionaries, ta moko was an integral pa...
The early voyagers, missionaries, settlers all reacted to the pukanohi, to the marked faces of the M...
Moko colours the lives, and the skins, of all the people involved in the making of this book “Mau Mo...
The early voyagers, missionaries, settlers all reacted to the pukanohi, to the marked faces of the ...
To honour the life and memory of the late Te Arikinui Te Atairangikaahu, and the elevation of her so...
Ta moko (Māori tattooing), especially facial moko (tattoo), has become a popular mechanism for the e...
This paper outlines the context of Ta Moko in the Māori world, and locates the practice in the Pacif...
To honour the life and memory of the late Te Arikinui Te Atairangikaahu, and the elevation of her so...
This thesis deals with the repatriation of Toi moko (tattooed, preserved heads of Māori or Moriori o...
Unrestricted"Expression of Identity: Maori Ta Moko and the Utilization of the Internet", examines Ta...
Traditionally Maori have been viewed as having no written form of communication prior to the Europea...
Moko patterns, mau moko, “wearing ink” is often explained as an act of remembrance, a symbol of hono...
Moko is still here, contrary to the widely held belief that the art and custom of moko-Maori skin ad...
The art of moko among the Maori of New Zealand declined soon after their contact with the Europeans ...
Until it came under serious attack from nineteenth century missionaries, ta moko was an integral par...
Until it came under serious attack from nineteenth century missionaries, ta moko was an integral pa...
The early voyagers, missionaries, settlers all reacted to the pukanohi, to the marked faces of the M...
Moko colours the lives, and the skins, of all the people involved in the making of this book “Mau Mo...
The early voyagers, missionaries, settlers all reacted to the pukanohi, to the marked faces of the ...
To honour the life and memory of the late Te Arikinui Te Atairangikaahu, and the elevation of her so...
Ta moko (Māori tattooing), especially facial moko (tattoo), has become a popular mechanism for the e...
This paper outlines the context of Ta Moko in the Māori world, and locates the practice in the Pacif...
To honour the life and memory of the late Te Arikinui Te Atairangikaahu, and the elevation of her so...
This thesis deals with the repatriation of Toi moko (tattooed, preserved heads of Māori or Moriori o...
Unrestricted"Expression of Identity: Maori Ta Moko and the Utilization of the Internet", examines Ta...
Traditionally Maori have been viewed as having no written form of communication prior to the Europea...
Moko patterns, mau moko, “wearing ink” is often explained as an act of remembrance, a symbol of hono...