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Malcolm Maclean and the Haka

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Manage episode 309465872 series 3010003
Content provided by Sport in History and British Society of Sports History. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sport in History and British Society of Sports History or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.
This episode Malcolm MacLean of University of Queensland/DMU/University of Gibraltar gives a paper on rugby in Aoteoroa/New Zealand and the multiple meanings of the Haka. Recent historiographic trends that admit the voices, both schol-arly and archival, of Empire’s Others alongside emerging post- and de-colonial praxis are prompting a significant rethinking of the dynamics of colonial sport. Even so, there remains a failure to recognise the historical agency of Indigenous peoples in set-tler colonialism, linked to the extinguishment of Indigenous dis-tinctiveness, ways of knowing and ways of being in settler colo-nial states. One of sport’s key roles in Indigenous persistence in settlement colonies is when it becomes a site of the sustenance of Indige-neity. A pre-match haka is widely recognised as a marker of New Zealand rugby, notably by the men’s national representative team. The high profile of the contemporary All Black haka over-shadows its fraught, ambivalent presence through much of the 20th century. That profile and methodological blindness result-ing from visons of sport grounded in a colonial matrix of power obscure a more banal Maori engagement with haka in rugby. This paper explores haka and sport as a site of Maori kin group maintenance as contested and complex sites and practices that are explored through evidence derived from literary and visual sources.
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126 episoade

Artwork
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Manage episode 309465872 series 3010003
Content provided by Sport in History and British Society of Sports History. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Sport in History and British Society of Sports History or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.
This episode Malcolm MacLean of University of Queensland/DMU/University of Gibraltar gives a paper on rugby in Aoteoroa/New Zealand and the multiple meanings of the Haka. Recent historiographic trends that admit the voices, both schol-arly and archival, of Empire’s Others alongside emerging post- and de-colonial praxis are prompting a significant rethinking of the dynamics of colonial sport. Even so, there remains a failure to recognise the historical agency of Indigenous peoples in set-tler colonialism, linked to the extinguishment of Indigenous dis-tinctiveness, ways of knowing and ways of being in settler colo-nial states. One of sport’s key roles in Indigenous persistence in settlement colonies is when it becomes a site of the sustenance of Indige-neity. A pre-match haka is widely recognised as a marker of New Zealand rugby, notably by the men’s national representative team. The high profile of the contemporary All Black haka over-shadows its fraught, ambivalent presence through much of the 20th century. That profile and methodological blindness result-ing from visons of sport grounded in a colonial matrix of power obscure a more banal Maori engagement with haka in rugby. This paper explores haka and sport as a site of Maori kin group maintenance as contested and complex sites and practices that are explored through evidence derived from literary and visual sources.
  continue reading

126 episoade

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