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CLOAKED IN LIFE AND DEATH: Korowai, kaitiaki and tangihanga

Key words
Māori
kaitiaki
korowai
taonga tuku iho
tangihanga
tūpāpaku
Author(s)
Vincent Malcolm-Buchanan
Ngahuia Te Awekotuku
Linda Waimarie Nikora
Start page
50
End page
60

Indigenous New Zealand Māori have maintained many customs evident in our pre-contact histories and, ever-pragmatic, we allowed and continue to allow for the introduction and infl uence of contemporary ideologies and objects of signifi cance. In te ao Māori, our world, such objects include taonga tuku iho, treasures from the past handed down to us. Our taonga are revered repositories that can reveal much about their owners, those owner's families, and the histories of our people, preceding and subsequent. Their tangible presence is often subtle, yet their social signifi cance can be historically and culturally far-reaching, movingly evocative and even controversial.

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MAI_Journal_V1,1_MalcolmBuchanan_etal.pdf
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