Ngā Manu o Te Wao: Birds of the Realm Conference
Category: Event
Keywords: Māori Indigenous knowledge; Gender and education; Queer & feminist pedagogy; Entanglement (Barad); Ethics of joy / liberation; Ecologies & place-based imaginaries
The birds of Aotearoa--ngā manu--gift us unique inspiration and metaphor. They are ubiquitous characters in whakataukī (Māori proverbs) and pūrākau (Māori narratives) and come to us as both a gift of the whenua (land) and as timeless oracles out of the archives of our kaitiaki (custodians). They are also always in time, if we notice them out of the corner of our eye, flitting from branch to branch like Pīwakawaka, or, like the Kākāpō, making a raucous mess of the rimu fruit, watching the forest through the night with its burrowing sisters, the Roroa and the Tokoeka. Whakataukī and Pūrākau speak to us in the present, awakening us again to inspiration in the field of Gender and Education. Here birds have the power to draw us into both old/new ways of thinking and old/new gratitude for a world that is always becoming. Birds draw us into dreaming—dreams appearing as they do like mischievous Kererū in the Kōwhai tree, heralding the myriad potentialities ahead, possibilities of healing, chatter, restoration, playfulness, rejuvenation, resistance, transformation in queer and feminist experiences in education and in society. Perhaps in a beautiful entanglement (Barad, 2007), the whakataukī and pūrākau of the birds meets Hélène Cixous’ dreams of birds, and together they symbolise generative acts of liberation, queering the proper, of belonging, drawing up the creative and unbounded song of the Kōrimako that sings to us of the possibility of an ethics of joy (Braidotti, 2018) in the expectation of difference, buoyed by the curiosity of Tui and the resilience of Kōkako as life giving tenets of a liberating pedagogy (hooks, 2014). There is an encounter in this, of what is Indigenous, with that far away, a pandemonium of philosophies, feminisms, pedagogies, ecologies, activisms and poetries meeting each other over the motu (island), but also, we find bird-life in the treetops, under fern fronds, nested in gullies and deep in the mountains, all in bird-form soaring, (flightless or in flight). Haere mai. Welcome.
Initiator(s):
Gender & Education Association
Deadline: 31.03.2026
https://nz-events.swoogo.com/gea2026/9599550
Post created by: Virginia Signorini