Artistic practice, public awareness, and the ngahere: art–science–Indigenous Māori collaborations for raising awareness of threats to native forests

We build a rationale for a nuanced approach to raising public awareness of ecological threats through interweaving art, science, and Mātauranga Māori (Indigenous Māori knowledge). The thinking we present emerges from the first phase of a transdisciplinary project, Toi Taiao Whakatairanga, which expl...

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Main Authors: Molly Mullen, Sophia C. R. Jerram, Mark Harvey, Nick W Waipara, Chervelle Athena
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2023-12-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol28/iss4/art13
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author Molly Mullen
Sophia C. R. Jerram
Mark Harvey
Nick W Waipara
Chervelle Athena
author_facet Molly Mullen
Sophia C. R. Jerram
Mark Harvey
Nick W Waipara
Chervelle Athena
author_sort Molly Mullen
collection DOAJ
description We build a rationale for a nuanced approach to raising public awareness of ecological threats through interweaving art, science, and Mātauranga Māori (Indigenous Māori knowledge). The thinking we present emerges from the first phase of a transdisciplinary project, Toi Taiao Whakatairanga, which explores the ways the arts can raise public awareness of two pathogens that are ravaging native trees in Aotearoa New Zealand: Phytopthora agathidicida (kauri dieback) and Austropuccinia psidii (myrtle rust). One of our first steps in the project was to explore understandings of "public” and “awareness” and their relevance to Aotearoa’s ecological, cultural, and political context. This collective task was about developing theory to guide the second phase of the project, in which we would commission nine Māori artists to create new works about kauri dieback and/or myrtle rust. One of the key outcomes of our collective inquiry was a realization of the limits of certain conceptions of public awareness in the settler–colonial contexts. For example, conceptions based on an unproblematized definition of “public” fail to respond adequately to the rights of Indigenous Māori tribes and subtribes to sovereignty over their lands and taonga species. We identify the need for alternatives to transactional conception of public awareness-raising. This includes alternatives that align with te ao Māori (Māori worldviews) and allow for a lack of consensus about the nature of an ecological threat or the required response. We propose that mātauranga Māori and arts practices can be combined with colonial science knowledge to promote different awarenesses in ways that are responsive to difference audiences, acknowledge different knowledge systems, hold space for contested/provisional knowledge, and support the mana motuhake of iwi/hāpū and the ngahere.
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spelling doaj.art-fccd70dc995e4288959bc50e7d07348e2023-12-29T16:59:58ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872023-12-012841310.5751/ES-14479-28041314479Artistic practice, public awareness, and the ngahere: art–science–Indigenous Māori collaborations for raising awareness of threats to native forestsMolly Mullen0Sophia C. R. Jerram1Mark Harvey2Nick W Waipara3Chervelle Athena4Waipapa Taumata Rau | University of AucklandWaipapa Taumata Rau | University of AucklandWaipapa Taumata Rau | University of AucklandRangahau Ahumāra Kai | Plant & Food ResearchAuckland University of TechnologyWe build a rationale for a nuanced approach to raising public awareness of ecological threats through interweaving art, science, and Mātauranga Māori (Indigenous Māori knowledge). The thinking we present emerges from the first phase of a transdisciplinary project, Toi Taiao Whakatairanga, which explores the ways the arts can raise public awareness of two pathogens that are ravaging native trees in Aotearoa New Zealand: Phytopthora agathidicida (kauri dieback) and Austropuccinia psidii (myrtle rust). One of our first steps in the project was to explore understandings of "public” and “awareness” and their relevance to Aotearoa’s ecological, cultural, and political context. This collective task was about developing theory to guide the second phase of the project, in which we would commission nine Māori artists to create new works about kauri dieback and/or myrtle rust. One of the key outcomes of our collective inquiry was a realization of the limits of certain conceptions of public awareness in the settler–colonial contexts. For example, conceptions based on an unproblematized definition of “public” fail to respond adequately to the rights of Indigenous Māori tribes and subtribes to sovereignty over their lands and taonga species. We identify the need for alternatives to transactional conception of public awareness-raising. This includes alternatives that align with te ao Māori (Māori worldviews) and allow for a lack of consensus about the nature of an ecological threat or the required response. We propose that mātauranga Māori and arts practices can be combined with colonial science knowledge to promote different awarenesses in ways that are responsive to difference audiences, acknowledge different knowledge systems, hold space for contested/provisional knowledge, and support the mana motuhake of iwi/hāpū and the ngahere.https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol28/iss4/art13aotearoa new zealandarts practicecolonial scienceecological threatsindigenous knowledgepublic awareness
spellingShingle Molly Mullen
Sophia C. R. Jerram
Mark Harvey
Nick W Waipara
Chervelle Athena
Artistic practice, public awareness, and the ngahere: art–science–Indigenous Māori collaborations for raising awareness of threats to native forests
Ecology and Society
aotearoa new zealand
arts practice
colonial science
ecological threats
indigenous knowledge
public awareness
title Artistic practice, public awareness, and the ngahere: art–science–Indigenous Māori collaborations for raising awareness of threats to native forests
title_full Artistic practice, public awareness, and the ngahere: art–science–Indigenous Māori collaborations for raising awareness of threats to native forests
title_fullStr Artistic practice, public awareness, and the ngahere: art–science–Indigenous Māori collaborations for raising awareness of threats to native forests
title_full_unstemmed Artistic practice, public awareness, and the ngahere: art–science–Indigenous Māori collaborations for raising awareness of threats to native forests
title_short Artistic practice, public awareness, and the ngahere: art–science–Indigenous Māori collaborations for raising awareness of threats to native forests
title_sort artistic practice public awareness and the ngahere art science indigenous maori collaborations for raising awareness of threats to native forests
topic aotearoa new zealand
arts practice
colonial science
ecological threats
indigenous knowledge
public awareness
url https://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol28/iss4/art13
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