新冠肺炎期间在奥特罗亚互相写信的hanuju和BLM (Black Lives Matter)运动并存的事件

Q4 Social Sciences Waikato Journal of Education Pub Date : 2021-07-05 DOI:10.15663/wje.v26i1.773
Mere Taito
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引用次数: 0

摘要

每首诗都有一个创作塔拉诺:一个关于它是如何创作的故事。在罗图曼语境中,“talanoa”或“故事”可以是“rogrog/o”或“hanuju”。从构思到最终定稿,创作“hanuju”可以揭示诗人内心的自我对话与外在的历史和当代经验之间经常变化的关系。记忆(由外部经验形成)会引发思考、重新体验和重新想象(内部的自我对话),并因此会冲动地将一首诗的内容、语气、形式和文学技巧推向意想不到的方向。对于一个诗人来说,离开一节,本能地问:“我是怎么走到这里的?”“诗歌创作的其他外部因素是写作时的社会和政治气候,委托任务的目的和规范,以及研究。”如果一首诗坚持要在破烂和陌生的领域里游荡,研究是必要的。在所有这些因素中,当前的社会政治气候可能是最能调动社区和个人从事创造性思维和写作的因素。这篇文章是我写这首诗的创作过程的单向(因为作为读者,你没有权利打断我)。在COVID-19期间相互写作,并同时发生了BLM运动。这部hanuju批判性地讨论了记住服从,为不服从而移动,以及作为统一和kotahitanga的愿景而出现的承认权力的主题。从本质上讲,这部hanuju主要是一个不服从的故事:庆祝我的祖母莉莉(mapiga Lilly)用罗图曼语讲故事的天赋,以及在一首诗中以罗图曼语为中心,这首诗是为奥特罗阿怀卡托地区的主要混血儿观众写的。
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The hanuju of writing each other in Aotearoa during COVID-19 and the coexisting event(s) of the BLM (Black Lives Matter) movement
Every poem has a creation talanoa: a story of how it was written. In a Rotuman context, ‘talanoa’ or story, can either be a ‘rogrog/o’ or ‘hanuju’. From conception to final drafting, the creation hanuju can reveal the often-volatile relationship between a poet’s internal self-talk and external historical and contemporary experiences. Memories (shaped by external experiences) will feed mulling, reliving, and reimagination (internal self-talk) and can consequently and impulsively set off the content, tone, form, and literary techniques of a poem into unanticipated directions. It is not uncommon for a poet to step away from a stanza and reflexively ask, ‘How did I get here?!’ Other external factors of poetic crafting are the social and political climate of the time of writing, the purpose and specifications of a commissioned task, and research. Research is necessary if a poem insists on wandering into ragged and unfamiliar territory. Of all these factors, current socio-political climate is perhaps the most influential in mobilising communities and individuals to engage in creative thinking and writing.        This article is a one-way (because as a reader, you are not in the position to interrupt me) hanuju of my creative process of writing the poem Writing each other during COVID-19 and the concurrent event(s) of the BLM movement. This hanuju critically discusses the themes of remember-ing obedience, mov-ing over in honour of disobedience, and conced-ing power that emerged as a vison for unity and kotahitanga. In essence, this hanuju is largely a story of disobedience: a celebration of my mapiga (grandmother) Lilly’s gift of Rotuman language storytelling and the centring of the Rotuman language in a poem written for a predominantly mixed audience in the Waikato region of Aotearoa.
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来源期刊
Waikato Journal of Education
Waikato Journal of Education Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
29
审稿时长
20 weeks
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