Keith Sinclair Public Lecture
Associate Professor Nēpia Mahuika | Lessons from an Iwi/Māori Perspective on History in Aotearoa NZ 2025.
Date and time
Location
201-440 (Building 201, Room 440)
10 Symonds Street Auckland, 1010 New ZealandGood to know
Highlights
- 1 hour, 30 minutes
- In person
About this event
“Noho, whakarongo, ako, whai tikanga, whai reo”: Lessons from an Iwi/Māori Perspective on History in Aotearoa NZ 2025.
Venue: University of Auckland B201 | 10 Symonds Street, Auckland
Lecture hall: Lecture Theatre 201-440
Time: Lecture 6pm
Speaker: Associate Professor Nēpia Mahuika (Massey University)
About the lecture:
Keith Sinclair once wrote that Māori were “peripheral” to the making of New Zealand national identity in the first half of the 20th century. But New Zealand history is not a simplistic story of national progress, and for Iwi is a relatively brief and recent chapter in a much longer and ongoing history of local Indigenous peoples. The nation-making “discursive constructions” of New Zealand history are part of our own “history wars” here that some think happened only in Australia and North America. Māori have battled for a long time to have our nuanced pasts included in gatekept national curricula and a discipline that displaced our kōrero as “prehistory” and unreliable. For too long, non-Māori historians continue to cannibalise Indigenous pasts here with no ethics or tikanga in a horrid practice noted by Māori scholars across generations. Te Pouhere Kōrero, established in 1992, was partly driven by a strong desire to reclaim and tell our stories on our own terms, but we have battled racism every step of the way.
Aotearoa New Zealand history has been, and still is, a racist gatekept community that still often tokenises and uses Iwi and Māori peoples and experts with little care given to appropriate Indigenous representation, tikanga or collaboration. New Zealand’s “grand-narrative” history in many ways is still a colonial imperialist story of “becoming” that continues to be tone deaf to the ongoing abuses of colonisation in the field of “New Zealand” history now. What have historians in Aotearoa actually learnt about national history and that relationship to Iwi and Māori pasts since Sinclair? This reflection considers the strained relationships between Māori and non-Māori when it comes to History on these shores, and what we might do about it today.
About the speaker:
Dr Nēpia Mahuika is Ngāti Porou with whakapapa to Ngāti Apakura, Maniapoto and Waikato Tainui. He is an Assoc Prof. in History at Massey University but taught at Waikato University for close to two decades before shifting south. He is a specialist in New Zealand History, Iwi and Māori histories, Historical methodology, theory, and ethics, and Oral History. Dr Mahuika was an adviser to the national History curriculum reset (2021-2023) and is currently completing a Marsden on Iwi/Māori History pedagogies (2022-2025), and two other book projects – one on international Indigenous oral history methods and ethics, and a long enduring project on the history of Makutu in Aotearoa. He is a long-standing member and leader of Te Pouhere Kōrero, a Fulbright scholar (2013), and the inaugural recipient of the Judith Binney Fellowship (2019).
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Getting to the venue: The Faculty of Arts and Educations' buildings are conveniently located at the heart of the University's City Campus and are easily accessible via many forms of public transport. For further information on public transport schedules, visit the Auckland Transport website. For those driving in, further information on parking options can be found here.
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