{"title":"Ōhāua te Rangi and reconciliation in Te Urewera, 1913–1983","authors":"S. Webster","doi":"10.15286/JPS.128.2.191-224","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This essay is an ethnohistorical reconstruction of Tuhoe Maori cognatic descent groups ('hapu') in their struggle to maintain control over ancestral lands centred around the community of Ohaua te Rangi deep in the Urewera mountains of New Zealand. The famous social anthropologist Raymond Firth happened to visit this community when it was in the middle of these struggles in 1924, documenting one hapu and its settlement with photos. The wider context of his visit serves as a sequel illustrating the continuing interplay of Maori kinship and power in Te Urewera that was examined earlier in this journal, but in the midst of predatory rather than benevolent colonial policies. The earlier policy of 1894-1912 had established Te Urewera as a large statutory reserve under virtual Tuhoe home rule, but the Crown soon subverted the statute and attempted to obtain the entire reserve. While examination of the earlier era was guided by Eric Wolf's theory of kinship, Marshall Sahlins's quite different theory helps to explain an apparent paradox of tatau pounamu, the Tuhoe ideal of reconciliation between kin groups.","PeriodicalId":45869,"journal":{"name":"Journal of the Polynesian Society","volume":"23 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2019-06-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"9","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of the Polynesian Society","FirstCategoryId":"98","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15286/JPS.128.2.191-224","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"历史学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ANTHROPOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 9
Abstract
This essay is an ethnohistorical reconstruction of Tuhoe Maori cognatic descent groups ('hapu') in their struggle to maintain control over ancestral lands centred around the community of Ohaua te Rangi deep in the Urewera mountains of New Zealand. The famous social anthropologist Raymond Firth happened to visit this community when it was in the middle of these struggles in 1924, documenting one hapu and its settlement with photos. The wider context of his visit serves as a sequel illustrating the continuing interplay of Maori kinship and power in Te Urewera that was examined earlier in this journal, but in the midst of predatory rather than benevolent colonial policies. The earlier policy of 1894-1912 had established Te Urewera as a large statutory reserve under virtual Tuhoe home rule, but the Crown soon subverted the statute and attempted to obtain the entire reserve. While examination of the earlier era was guided by Eric Wolf's theory of kinship, Marshall Sahlins's quite different theory helps to explain an apparent paradox of tatau pounamu, the Tuhoe ideal of reconciliation between kin groups.
这篇文章是一个民族历史的重建,图霍毛利人的血统群体(“哈普”)在他们的斗争中保持对祖先土地的控制,这些土地集中在新西兰乌雷韦拉山脉深处的ohahua te Rangi社区。著名的社会人类学家雷蒙德·费斯(Raymond Firth)碰巧在1924年的斗争中访问了这个社区,用照片记录了一个哈普和它的定居点。他这次访问的更广泛的背景可以作为本杂志早些时候研究的毛利人亲属关系和权力在特乌雷维拉持续相互作用的续集,但在掠夺性而不是仁慈的殖民政策中。1894-1912年的早期政策建立了Urewera作为一个大的法定保护区,实际上是图霍人的地方自治,但国王很快就推翻了法规并试图获得整个保护区。虽然对早期时代的研究是以埃里克·沃尔夫的亲属关系理论为指导的,但马歇尔·萨林斯的截然不同的理论有助于解释图霍族亲属群体之间和解的理想——tatau pounamu——的一个明显的悖论。