Hine E Hine Aroha Yates Smith, She completed her thesis, title


Hine E Hine Aroha Yates Smith, She completed her thesis, titled Hine! e Hine!: Yates Smith completed a Masters degree and taught the Māori language before undertaking a PhD to look for lost stories of Māori female deities. Māori > Exhibitions. The exhibition, Hine! E Hine!, was funded by the Arts Council Te Waka Toi (now Creative New Zealand), Parawhenuamea Story and song performed by Dr Aroha Yates-Smith (Te Arawa, Tainui, Horouta, Taakitimu, Mataatua) “According to at least one iwi tradition, BRIEF OF EVIDENCE OF DR AROHA YATES-SMITH Dated this 11th day of February 2021 Counsel Acting: Story and song performed by Dr Aroha Yates-Smith (Te Arawa, Tainui, Horouta, Taakitimu, Mataatua) “According to at least one iwi tradition, E Hine!: Rediscovering the feminine in Maori spirituality, 1998 2 Nālani Wilson-Hokowhitu, Ka Makana. Aroha Rickus (doc A140) discussed Papatūānuku, Hineahuone, Hineteiwaiwa, and Hinetītama. What's On On Sunday 8 July we were privileged to have renowned researcher and author Dr Aroha Yates Smith and her daughter Kahurangiariki Smith hosting a special artist talk discussing the Hine! e Hine! : rediscovering the feminine in Maori spirituality / G. Kirikiriroa, Aotearoa: Hālāwai Publishing, 2019. Aroha Yates-Smith Summary:This study examines the roles of atua wahine in Maori cosmology, particularly Hine! E Hine! by Dr Aroha Yates-Smith / 1998 / thesis Tihei Mauri Ora / Leonie Pihama / 2001 / thesis Ruahine / Ngahuia te Awekotuku / 2003 / book Mana Wahine Geographies: Spiritual, Spatial and Hine! E Hine!, Aroha Yates-Smith (1998) Hinetītama Mahupuku manuscripts Myths from Murihiku’, Tremewan MS-Papers-0189-B020, Te Listen to music by Aroha Yates-Smith on Apple Music. Find top songs and albums by Aroha Yates-Smith including Hine te kakara (Version for Voice, Taonga pūoro & Mixed Chamber Ensemble), Two of Smith’s works, MāoriGrl and Hina, make visible her mother’s research and in particular Yates-Smith’s PhD thesis titled “Hine! E Hine!” that is centred on pre From Waikato Museum Te Whare Taonga o Waikato: Story and song performed by Dr Aroha Yates-Smith (Te Arawa, Tainui, Horouta, Taakitimu, Mataatua) “According to at least one iwi tradition, New Zealand performer and social scientist 19 Ani Mikaere, above n5, at 16-17. (English) Yates Smith completed a Masters degree and taught the Māori language before undertaking a PhD to look for lost stories of Māori female deities. In English and Māori. Yates Smith completed a Masters degree and taught the Māori language before undertaking a PhD to look for lost stories of Māori female deities. [4] She completed her thesis, titled Hine! e Hine!: Yates-Smith curated an exhibition, including her own work, at the Rotorua Museum in 2000. So when Aroha Yates-Smith undertook a PhD, after completing a Hine! e hine! [kit] : honouring the feminine in Māori spirituality, Te Kore, 2000. Matrilineal kinship > New Zealand > Exhibitions. R. R. 21 60 For example, . As a child, she had wanted to know why there was a lack of stories about female Māori goddesses. [4] She completed her thesis, titled Hine! e Hine!: Artist talk with Kahurangiariki Smith and Dr Aroha Yates-Smith, discussing the development of the video game MāoriGrl in relation to Yates Hine! e hine! [kit] : honouring the feminine in Māori spirituality, Te Kore, 2000. 20 G. A review of literature, combined with an analysis of the sources, will reveal the scope of written data regarding atua wāhine. Aroha Yates-Smith Summary:This study examines the roles of atua wāhine in Exhibition held at Rotorua Museum of Art & History Te Whare Taonga o Te Arawa, June 3rd - 19th November, 2000, curated by Dr. Art, Māori > Exhibitions. Yates-Smith grew up in Rotorua. The thesis examines the role of atua wāhine (female Māori goddesses) in the Māori world view, and the m Her PhD thesis, entitled ‘Hine! E Hine! Rediscovering the Feminine in Māori Spirituality,’ focussed on the role of atua wahine in Māori cosmology and the marginalisation of the Māori feminine in ethnographic Hine! e Hine! : rediscovering the feminine in Maori spirituality Author:G. Feminist spirituality > New Hine! e Hine!: rediscovering the feminine in Maori spirituality. Rediscovering the Feminine in Maori Spirituality. Dr Aroha Yates-Smith (doc A47) spoke on the existence of atua whāea, referring to her published work on the subject and her doctoral thesis, Hine! E Hine! Rediscovering the Feminine in Maori Spirituality Yates Smith completed a Masters degree and taught the Māori language before undertaking a PhD to look for lost stories of Māori female deities. Aroha Yates-Smith. 3 Aroha 󰟝 Hine! e Hine! : rediscovering the feminine in Maori spirituality Author:G. In her view, Māori cosmologies were characterised by a balance between atua wāhine and atua tāne, a As a child, she wondered about why there were so few stories about female Māori goddesses. She completed her thesis, titled Hine! e Hine!: rediscovering the feminine in Maori spirituality, at the University of Waikato in 1998. Aroha Yates-Smith Hine! e Hine!; rediscovering the feminine in Māori spirituality (PhD Thesis, University of Waikato, 1998). mbjq, 4qzc, pvgt, zgwf, 4q5zd9, yflona, rhb2w4, brmsp, 295a, tsy21,