TEARS OF RANGI: EXPERIMENTS ACROSS
WORLDS
Anne SalmondHardback, 228 x 152mm , 512 pages
978 1 86940 865 7
Māori studies, 24 July 2017, $65.00
Auckland University Press.
In Tears of Rangi Dame Anne Salmond looks at New
Zealand as a site of cosmodiversity, a place where multiple worlds engage
and collide. Beginning with a fine-grained inquiry into the early period of
encounters between Māori and Europeans in New Zealand (1769–1840), Salmond then
investigates such clashes and exchanges in key areas of contemporary life –
waterways, land, the sea and people.
We live in a world of gridded maps, Outlook calendars
and balance sheets – making it seem that this is the nature of reality itself.
But in New Zealand, concepts of whakapapa and hau, complex networks and
reciprocal exchange, may point to new ways of understanding interactions
between peoples, and between people and the natural world. Like our ancestors,
Anne Salmond suggests, we too may have a chance to experiment across
worlds.
Tears of Rangi
has also provided the catalyst for a documentary series, Artefact, produced by
Jane Reeves (Greenstone Pictures) and featuring Salmond talking to local and
international authorities about ‘experiments across worlds’. It releases on
Māori Television early next year.
About the author
Dame Anne Salmond is Distinguished Professor of Māori
Studies at the University of Auckland and author of books including The
Trial of the Cannibal Dog: Captain Cook in the South Seas (2003, Penguin
UK, Penguin NZ, Yale University Press); Aphrodite’s Island: The European
Discovery of Tahiti (2007, University of California Press, Penguin NZ) and Bligh:
William Bligh in the South Seas (2011, University of California Press,
Penguin NZ). Among many honours and awards, she is an International Member of
the American Philosophical Society, a Foreign Associate of the US National
Academy of Sciences and a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy; in 2013
she became New Zealander of the Year and winner of the Rutherford Medal from
the Royal Society of New Zealand.
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