This thesis is a history of marginalisation as experienced by Maori women within New Zealand. My argument is that through the founding British Crown, the education system and Christianity, Maori women were marginalised (Pihama, 2001). My hypothesis is that once we understand how we were marginalised, we begin to liberate ourselves. I seek to identify legislation and social phenomena that marginalised Maori women. These are the sorts of discourses led to assimilative, alienative and hegemonic outcomes for Maori women. Moana Jackson refers to this form of marginalisation and its influences as, “the destruction of the Maori soul” (as cited by Mikaere, 1995, p. 138). The consequences of marginalisation will highlight the importance of identit...
Typescript.Bibliography: leaves 104-116.Microfilm.116 leavesThis thesis endeavors to reconstruct the...
The central problem investigated here is the conflict between the predominant role that Maori women ...
This thesis explored the socio-political experiences and views of seven Maori women from the tribe o...
This thesis is a history of marginalisation as experienced by Maori women within New Zealand. My arg...
This thesis is a history of marginalisation as experienced by Maori women within New Zealand. My arg...
This thesis examines the mid-twentieth century attempts to create integrated and therefore 'ideal' M...
This thesis attempts to understand the intellectual milieu of Maori society in the early colonial p...
Settler colonisation produced particular colonial subjects: indigene and settler. The specificity of...
Whanau are the building blocks of society and their well-being is critical to strong,vibrant and con...
This thesis examines the exclusion of bi/multi racial Maori women from dominant representations of M...
This thesis explores the ambivalent nature of Maori political theory as expressed through the writin...
Whāia te iti kahurangi ki te tūohu koe me he maunga teitei Seek the treasure you value most dearly:...
Today Maori are thought, by some, to be a privileged people. Not only are they considered to have be...
Raranga is a generic label for diverse forms of Maori weaving, primarily, though not exclusively un...
Veracini suggests that the coloniser does not yet know ‘how settler decolonisation should appear’. I...
Typescript.Bibliography: leaves 104-116.Microfilm.116 leavesThis thesis endeavors to reconstruct the...
The central problem investigated here is the conflict between the predominant role that Maori women ...
This thesis explored the socio-political experiences and views of seven Maori women from the tribe o...
This thesis is a history of marginalisation as experienced by Maori women within New Zealand. My arg...
This thesis is a history of marginalisation as experienced by Maori women within New Zealand. My arg...
This thesis examines the mid-twentieth century attempts to create integrated and therefore 'ideal' M...
This thesis attempts to understand the intellectual milieu of Maori society in the early colonial p...
Settler colonisation produced particular colonial subjects: indigene and settler. The specificity of...
Whanau are the building blocks of society and their well-being is critical to strong,vibrant and con...
This thesis examines the exclusion of bi/multi racial Maori women from dominant representations of M...
This thesis explores the ambivalent nature of Maori political theory as expressed through the writin...
Whāia te iti kahurangi ki te tūohu koe me he maunga teitei Seek the treasure you value most dearly:...
Today Maori are thought, by some, to be a privileged people. Not only are they considered to have be...
Raranga is a generic label for diverse forms of Maori weaving, primarily, though not exclusively un...
Veracini suggests that the coloniser does not yet know ‘how settler decolonisation should appear’. I...
Typescript.Bibliography: leaves 104-116.Microfilm.116 leavesThis thesis endeavors to reconstruct the...
The central problem investigated here is the conflict between the predominant role that Maori women ...
This thesis explored the socio-political experiences and views of seven Maori women from the tribe o...