1st Edition

Mana Tangatarua Mixed heritages, ethnic identity and biculturalism in Aotearoa/New Zealand

Edited By Zarine L. Rocha, Melinda Webber Copyright 2018
    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    236 Pages 14 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This volume explores mixed race/mixed ethnic identities in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Mixed race and mixed ethnic identity are growing in popularity as research topics around the world. This edited collection looks at mixed race and mixed ethnic identity in New Zealand: a unique context, as multiple ethnic identities have been officially recognised for more than 30 years.



    The book draws upon research across a range of disciplines, exploring the historical and contemporary ways in which official and social understandings of mixed race and ethnicity have changed. It focuses on the interactions between race, ethnicity, national identity, indigeneity and culture, especially in terms of visibility and self-defined identity in the New Zealand context.



    Mana Tangatarua situates New Zealand in the existing international scholarship, positioning experiences from New Zealand within theoretical understandings of mixedness. The chapters develop wider theories of mixed race and mixed ethnic identity, at macro and micro levels, looking at the interconnections between the two. The volume as a whole reveals the diverse ways in which mixed race is experienced and understood, providing a key contribution to the theory and development of mixed race globally.







          Foreword Paul Spoonley





          Introduction: Situating mixed race in New Zealand and the world. Zarine L. Rocha and Melinda Webber





          Section one: Mixedness and classifications across generations





          Chapter One: A history of mixed race in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Zarine L. Rocha and Angela Wanhalla





          Chapter Two: Reflections of identity: ethnicity, ethnic recording and ethnic mobility. Robert Didham





          Chapter Three: Is ethnicity all in the family? How parents in Aotearoa New Zealand identify their children. Polly Atatoa Carr, Tahu Kukutai, Dinusha Bandara and Patrick Broman





          Chapter Four: Lives at the intersections: multiple ethnicities and child protection. Emily Keddell





          Section two: Mixed identifications, indigeneity and biculturalism





          Chapter Five: Raranga Wha: Mana whenua, mana moana and mixedness in one Māori/Fijian/Samoan/Pākehā whānau. Rae Si‘ilata





          Chapter Six: Beyond Appearances: Mixed ethnic and cultural identities among biliterate Japanese-European New Zealander young adults. Kaya Oriyama





          Chapter Seven: Love and Politics: Rethinking Biculturalism and Multiculturalism in Aotearoa-New Zealand. Lincoln I. Dam





          Chapter Eight: Māori and Pākehā encounters of difference – the realisation that we’re not the same. Karyn Paringatai





          Section three: Mixing the majority/Pākehā identity





          Chapter Nine: Multidimensional intersections: the merging and emerging of complex European settler identities. Robert Didham, Paul Callister and Geoff Chambers





          Chapter Ten: Hauntology and Pākehā: disrupting the notion of homogeneity. Esther Fitzpatrick

    Biography

    Dr Zarine L. Rocha, is the Managing Editor of Current Sociology and the Asian Journal of Social Science.



    Dr Melinda Webber is an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Education and Social Work at the University of Auckland.