闹鬼的学院:用瓦卡帕帕(Whakapapa)方法理解毛利博士生在奥特亚罗瓦大学中的归属感

Genealogy Pub Date : 2024-07-15 DOI:10.3390/genealogy8030091
Hine Funaki-Cole
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摘要

闹鬼往往被误解为奇怪而可怕的超自然经历,模糊了真假之间的界限。然而,原住民的鬼魂事件不仅可以让人面对现实,也可以让人感到安慰,支持人们对地方的归属感。本文从毛利人的哲学角度出发,以 "瓦卡帕帕"(whakapapa)观点为基础,对鬼魂学及其与时间、空间、地点和归属感的关系进行了理论分析。瓦卡帕帕(whakapapa)不仅承认人与人之间的亲缘关系,而且承认万物及其与万物之间的关系,从天空到大地,以及两者之间的精神联系。我运用whakapapa kōrero理论框架,通过Wā、Wānanga(已讲述和未讲述的毛利故事)和Te Wāhi Ngaro,借鉴毛利人对时间和地点的建构,从我的博士论文中提出一些见解,毛利博士生在论文中分享了他们在学校的日常经历。在殖民者殖民结构、规范和日常互动的背景下,我认为闹鬼是毛利人日常熟悉的事情,在毛利博士生建立和维持对大学的归属感方面发挥着重要作用。
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The Haunted Academy: A Whakapapa Approach to Understanding Māori Doctoral Student Belonging in Aotearoa Universities
Hauntings are often misconstrued as strange and often scary supernatural experiences that blur the lines between what is real and what is not. Yet, Indigenous hauntings can not only be confronting, but they can also be comforting and support place belonging. This paper offers a Māori philosophical way of theorising hauntology and its relation to time, space, place, and belonging by privileging a whakapapa perspective. Whakapapa acknowledges not only kinship relations for people, but all things and their relationship to them, from the sky to the lands, and the spiritual connections in between. Employing a whakapapa kōrero theoretical framework, I draw on Māori constructs of time and place through Wā, Wānanga (Māori stories both told and untold), and Te Wāhi Ngaro to offer some insights from my doctoral thesis where Māori PhD students shared their everyday experiences in their institutions. With a backdrop of settler-colonial structures, norms, and daily interactions, I argue that hauntings are an everyday familiar occurrence in Te Ao Māori which play a major role in the way Māori doctoral students establish and maintain a sense of belonging in their universities.
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