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The Haunted Academy: A Whakapapa Approach to Understanding Māori Doctoral Student Belonging in Aotearoa Universities

journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-12, 22:59 authored by Hine FunakiHine Funaki
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.

History

Preferred citation

Funaki-Cole, H. (2024). The Haunted Academy: A Whakapapa Approach to Understanding Māori Doctoral Student Belonging in Aotearoa Universities. Genealogy, 8(3), 91-91. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy8030091

Journal title

Genealogy

Volume

8

Issue

3

Publication date

2024-09-01

Pagination

91-91

Publisher

MDPI AG

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2024-07-15

ISSN

2313-5778

eISSN

2313-5778

Language

en

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