Are we still moving, as Albert Wendt called for in
1976, ‘Towards a New Oceania’? Has this new Oceania turned tides and become a
‘niu’ Oceania? In what ways and for what
purposes? Wendt’s seminal treatise on
the development of Pacific Arts and Criticism lay an elemental foundation for
those in the Pacific to develop their creative and critical voices in a post-colonial
(where ‘post’ means ‘before’, ‘during’ and ‘after’ colonialism) Pacific. Wendt’s article poses questions that remain
relevant today:
· With over 1200 indigenous languages in our region,
“plus English, French, Hindi, Spanish and various forms of pidgin” how do we
“catch and interpret the Void”?
· “What is authentic culture?”
· How have contemporary writers and artists drawn on the
“fabulous treasure house of traditional motifs, themes, styles, material”
to “express our uniqueness, identity,
pain, joy, and our own visions of Oceania and earth”?
This SPACLALS Hui investigates and celebrates Pacific
Arts and Criticism by inviting submissions (critical papers, creative
performances, workshops) that addresses a question above or engages with any of
the following elemental themes and lines of enquiry:
EARTH: Examines the grassroots issues in the teaching and
politics surrounding Pacific Literature (What Pacific Literature gets taught in
our educational institutions? How do we best teach it? How do we best disseminate it? How do we get it published?)
FIRE: Fires up creative expression in literature (poetry,
fiction, drama) and the arts (dance, song, sculpture) and asks “What makes this
‘niu’?” How is creative practice imbued
with a sense of place, history, identity?
WATER: Our bodies
are more water than blood. In what ways
do both water (ocean) and blood (genealogy) carry the currents of contemporary
identity-based enquiry?
AIR: Wind, breathe, word.
What aesthetics from oral traditions and culture-based performance have
been adapted in our contemporary critical and creative environment (spoken word
poetry, dance, photography, the fine arts, sculpture, critical practice?)
Vitally, part of our ongoing decolonisation means
interrogating the boundaries that often exist between institutions and the
community; between academia and creativity. The promotion, teaching, creation
and dissemination of Pacific literature, arts, and criticism entail a holistic,
grassroots approach that acknowledges the ‘Va’, the inter-relational connection
between the scholarly and the creative. Therefore, critical and creative
submissions will be interwoven throughout the hui. There will be a creative ‘call and response’
sharing on Thursday night, with finale performance event on Friday night.
This hui offers total immersion, total fun, and a
totally ‘niu’ way of investigating and celebrating Pacific literature, its arts
and its criticism. It will be valuable
to the Professional Development of anyone working and teaching in a Pacific environment. It will also nourish and reinvigorate an
existing network of Pacific writers, performers, artists and critics, and
hopefully, inspire some new/niu contributors.
Our keynote speaker is Maualaivao Albert Wendt.
SPAN, the journal of SPACLALS, will publish conference
proceedings.
Venue and registration details to be advised. We will be endeavoring to minimize conference
registration fees for Under 25s and students.
We invite paper and creative proposals by 30 APRIL
2013.
For conference paper submissions please send to Dr
Selina Tusitala Marsh, Chair of SPACLALS:
s.marsh@auckland.ac.nz with the subject heading SPACLALS HUI SUBMISSION.
For all creative submissions (performances) and
workshop proposals, please send to Grace Taylor grace.teuila@gmail.com with the subject heading SPACLALS HUI SUBMISSION.
Fa’afetai tele lava
No comments:
Post a Comment