This thesis tests the hypothesis that it is possible to both decolonise and indigenise the New Zealand cinema screen. Secondary research reveals how those discourses that promoted roles and expectations for Māori within the New Zealand film industry were based principally upon historical colonial ideologies imposed by various means upon the native populous, and subsequently reproduced. These discourses of race, gender and religion perpetuate negative belief systems about Māori and contribute to the reproduction of stereotypical images of Māori, such as the irrational, naive, simpleminded and warlike Māori man, or the domesticated, lustful and sexually available Māori woman. Research by creative practice advances the project of decolonisin...
This thesis consists of practice-led research in the form of a full-length script for a feature film...
RESEARCH QUESTION How can indigenous scriptwriting practitioners keep traditional Sāmoan stories al...
Settler colonisation produced particular colonial subjects: indigene and settler. The specificity of...
This thesis tests the hypothesis that it is possible to both decolonise and indigenise the New Zeala...
This article draws on the textual analysis of films that produced three distinctive collective resis...
This thesis envisions a new path for ethnographic cinema. While revisionist works challenge a coloni...
This comparative study of postcolonial representations of indigeneity in five New Zealand and Austra...
This thesis argues that the processes and resulting products of cross-cultural creative collaboratio...
This thesis draws together three strands for analysis: the social, political and historical narrati...
The use of Hollywood genres to package our films for overseas consumption has been an historic featu...
This thesis argues that stability of the concept ‘national cinema’ is located in the discursive posi...
Writing Blackness for the New Zealand Screen is a practice-led experiment in decolonising screenwrit...
This article examines the evolution of Maori filmmaking since the 1980s and explores this Indigenous...
The recent revival of Maori and Aborigine cultures through the medium of cinema includes representat...
This thesis considers fictional representations of the New Zealand Wars. Through the media of novels...
This thesis consists of practice-led research in the form of a full-length script for a feature film...
RESEARCH QUESTION How can indigenous scriptwriting practitioners keep traditional Sāmoan stories al...
Settler colonisation produced particular colonial subjects: indigene and settler. The specificity of...
This thesis tests the hypothesis that it is possible to both decolonise and indigenise the New Zeala...
This article draws on the textual analysis of films that produced three distinctive collective resis...
This thesis envisions a new path for ethnographic cinema. While revisionist works challenge a coloni...
This comparative study of postcolonial representations of indigeneity in five New Zealand and Austra...
This thesis argues that the processes and resulting products of cross-cultural creative collaboratio...
This thesis draws together three strands for analysis: the social, political and historical narrati...
The use of Hollywood genres to package our films for overseas consumption has been an historic featu...
This thesis argues that stability of the concept ‘national cinema’ is located in the discursive posi...
Writing Blackness for the New Zealand Screen is a practice-led experiment in decolonising screenwrit...
This article examines the evolution of Maori filmmaking since the 1980s and explores this Indigenous...
The recent revival of Maori and Aborigine cultures through the medium of cinema includes representat...
This thesis considers fictional representations of the New Zealand Wars. Through the media of novels...
This thesis consists of practice-led research in the form of a full-length script for a feature film...
RESEARCH QUESTION How can indigenous scriptwriting practitioners keep traditional Sāmoan stories al...
Settler colonisation produced particular colonial subjects: indigene and settler. The specificity of...