Published by Te Papa Press
Publication date: May 2012
Aotearoa New Zealand is home to a large Pasifika population. This illustrated history is the first of its kind to tell their stories – from the legendary feats of the ancestors of modern Māori, to the politically explosive dawn raids of the 1970s, and beyond.
This beautiful book is lavishly illustrated with hundreds of historical and contemporary photos and archival documents. Drawing on a rich cache of oral history, it is a fresh and surprising record of over a thousand years of discovery, encounter, and cultural exchange.
Table of Contents:
Foreword
Introduction
- E kore au e ngaro: Ancestral connections to the Pacific
- Explorers and pioneers: The first Pacific people in New Zealand
- Visitors: Tupaia the navigator priest
- Little-known lives: Pacific Islanders in nineteenth-century New Zealand
- A Pacific destiny: New Zealand’s overseas empire 1840–1945
- Barques, banana boats and Boeings: Connecting New Zealand and the Pacific
- FIA (forgotten in action): Pacific Islanders in the New Zealand armed forces
- A land of milk and honey? Education and employment migration schemes in the postwar era
- Communities and cultures: Pacific organisations in New Zealand
- Economic links between the Pacific and New Zealand in the twentieth century
- All power to the people: Overstayers, dawn raids and the Polynesian Panthers
- Good neighbour, big brother, kin? New Zealand’s foreign policy in the contemporary Pacific
- Representing the nation: Pacific peoples and politicians in New Zealand
- Conspicuous selections: Pacific Islanders in New Zealand sport
- Arts specific: Pacific peoples and New Zealand arts
Epilogue
Contributers:
Anne Salmond
Cluny MacPherson
Fulimalo Pereira
Gavin McLean
Geoff Bertram
Graeme Whimp
Janet Davidson
Melani Anae
Peter Adds
Teresia Teaiwa
Claudia Orange
Extent: 360 pp
Illustrations: More than 300 full-colour plates and black-and-white images
Format: 280 mm x 230 mm
Binding: PB