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January 2023
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May 16 2023
He wahine māia, he wahine toa: A Gathering of Reflections on the Work of Haunani-Kay Trask
Hineitimoana Greensill;
Hineitimoana Greensill
Hineitimoana Greensill (Tainui, Ngāti Koata, Ngāti Porou) is a PhD candidate in history at Waipapa Taumata Rau, the University of Auckland. Hineitimoana’s doctoral project focuses on the political thought of Maori women in the 1970s and ’80s. As a multifaceted archival project, her research engages with the intellectual and political work of her grandmother in conversation with a broader public archive of Māori women’s writing in the late twentieth century. Sam Iti Prendergast is of Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Paretekawa, Irish, German, and English descent. She is a lecturer in history at the University of Waikato and a PhD candidate in history at New York University. Her research investigates recent Māori diasporic movement in the historical and ongoing context of settler colonialism in the Pacific. Wanda Ieremia-Allan (Sapapali‘i, Safotulafai, Saōluafata, Lalomanu–Samoa) is a PhD candidate in Te Tumu, School of Māori, Pacific and Indigenous Studies, University of Otago, Aotearoa New Zealand. Wanda’s archival research traces the early twentieth-century intergenerational, intellectual gafa/genealogy of Samoan writing in the London Missionary Society newspaper O le Sulu Samoa. Mere Taito is a creative-practice PhD candidate at the University of Otago, School of Arts English and Linguistics division. Her research examines the influence of reading creative Rotuman archival and contemporary texts on the writing of multilingual Fäeag Rotuạm ta-English poetry.
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Sam Iti Prendergast;
Sam Iti Prendergast
Hineitimoana Greensill (Tainui, Ngāti Koata, Ngāti Porou) is a PhD candidate in history at Waipapa Taumata Rau, the University of Auckland. Hineitimoana’s doctoral project focuses on the political thought of Maori women in the 1970s and ’80s. As a multifaceted archival project, her research engages with the intellectual and political work of her grandmother in conversation with a broader public archive of Māori women’s writing in the late twentieth century. Sam Iti Prendergast is of Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Paretekawa, Irish, German, and English descent. She is a lecturer in history at the University of Waikato and a PhD candidate in history at New York University. Her research investigates recent Māori diasporic movement in the historical and ongoing context of settler colonialism in the Pacific. Wanda Ieremia-Allan (Sapapali‘i, Safotulafai, Saōluafata, Lalomanu–Samoa) is a PhD candidate in Te Tumu, School of Māori, Pacific and Indigenous Studies, University of Otago, Aotearoa New Zealand. Wanda’s archival research traces the early twentieth-century intergenerational, intellectual gafa/genealogy of Samoan writing in the London Missionary Society newspaper O le Sulu Samoa. Mere Taito is a creative-practice PhD candidate at the University of Otago, School of Arts English and Linguistics division. Her research examines the influence of reading creative Rotuman archival and contemporary texts on the writing of multilingual Fäeag Rotuạm ta-English poetry.
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Wanda Ieremia-Allan;
Wanda Ieremia-Allan
Hineitimoana Greensill (Tainui, Ngāti Koata, Ngāti Porou) is a PhD candidate in history at Waipapa Taumata Rau, the University of Auckland. Hineitimoana’s doctoral project focuses on the political thought of Maori women in the 1970s and ’80s. As a multifaceted archival project, her research engages with the intellectual and political work of her grandmother in conversation with a broader public archive of Māori women’s writing in the late twentieth century. Sam Iti Prendergast is of Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Paretekawa, Irish, German, and English descent. She is a lecturer in history at the University of Waikato and a PhD candidate in history at New York University. Her research investigates recent Māori diasporic movement in the historical and ongoing context of settler colonialism in the Pacific. Wanda Ieremia-Allan (Sapapali‘i, Safotulafai, Saōluafata, Lalomanu–Samoa) is a PhD candidate in Te Tumu, School of Māori, Pacific and Indigenous Studies, University of Otago, Aotearoa New Zealand. Wanda’s archival research traces the early twentieth-century intergenerational, intellectual gafa/genealogy of Samoan writing in the London Missionary Society newspaper O le Sulu Samoa. Mere Taito is a creative-practice PhD candidate at the University of Otago, School of Arts English and Linguistics division. Her research examines the influence of reading creative Rotuman archival and contemporary texts on the writing of multilingual Fäeag Rotuạm ta-English poetry.
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Mere Taito
Mere Taito
Hineitimoana Greensill (Tainui, Ngāti Koata, Ngāti Porou) is a PhD candidate in history at Waipapa Taumata Rau, the University of Auckland. Hineitimoana’s doctoral project focuses on the political thought of Maori women in the 1970s and ’80s. As a multifaceted archival project, her research engages with the intellectual and political work of her grandmother in conversation with a broader public archive of Māori women’s writing in the late twentieth century. Sam Iti Prendergast is of Ngāti Maniapoto, Ngāti Paretekawa, Irish, German, and English descent. She is a lecturer in history at the University of Waikato and a PhD candidate in history at New York University. Her research investigates recent Māori diasporic movement in the historical and ongoing context of settler colonialism in the Pacific. Wanda Ieremia-Allan (Sapapali‘i, Safotulafai, Saōluafata, Lalomanu–Samoa) is a PhD candidate in Te Tumu, School of Māori, Pacific and Indigenous Studies, University of Otago, Aotearoa New Zealand. Wanda’s archival research traces the early twentieth-century intergenerational, intellectual gafa/genealogy of Samoan writing in the London Missionary Society newspaper O le Sulu Samoa. Mere Taito is a creative-practice PhD candidate at the University of Otago, School of Arts English and Linguistics division. Her research examines the influence of reading creative Rotuman archival and contemporary texts on the writing of multilingual Fäeag Rotuạm ta-English poetry.
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American Indian Culture and Research Journal (2023) 46 (1): 55–72.
Citation
Hineitimoana Greensill, Sam Iti Prendergast, Wanda Ieremia-Allan, Mere Taito; He wahine māia, he wahine toa: A Gathering of Reflections on the Work of Haunani-Kay Trask. American Indian Culture and Research Journal 1 January 2023; 46 (1): 55–72. doi: https://doi.org/10.17953/aicrj.46.1.greensill
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