Pakiaka

SKU: 9781988503448
Regular price $25.00
Unit price
per
  • Author:
  • ISBN:
    9781988503448
  • Publication Date:
    HURIA Gabrielle
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    40
  • Binding:
    Paperback
  • Publisher:
    Canterbury University Press
  • Country of Publication:
    New Zealand
Pakiaka
Pakiaka

Pakiaka

SKU: 9781988503448
Regular price $25.00
Unit price
per
  • Author:
  • ISBN:
    9781988503448
  • Publication Date:
    HURIA Gabrielle
  • Edition:
    1
  • Pages:
    40
  • Binding:
    Paperback
  • Publisher:
    Canterbury University Press
  • Country of Publication:
    New Zealand

Description

Pakiaka, the lean, essential debut volume by Gabrielle Huria, is a timely reminder of how good poetry can be at storytelling. The stories Huria tells are local and cosmic, firmly rooted in Ngai Tahu whakapapa and Te Waipounamu history but always attuned to the wide, interconnected world. These are accounts of stolen land and agricultural negligence, but also of tradition, connection, kaitiakitanga, birds, eels, rivers and winds. Of sharing kai and responsibilities. These are poems that scoff at our complacencies and ask a vital question: ‘Is this what Māori women do? Carry the world on their backs?

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  • Pakiaka, the lean, essential debut volume by Gabrielle Huria, is a timely reminder of how good poetry can be at storytelling. The stories Huria tells are local and cosmic, firmly rooted in Ngai Tahu whakapapa and Te Waipounamu history but always attuned to the wide, interconnected world. These are accounts of stolen land and agricultural negligence, but also of tradition, connection, kaitiakitanga, birds, eels, rivers and winds. Of sharing kai and responsibilities. These are poems that scoff at our complacencies and ask a vital question: ‘Is this what Māori women do? Carry the world on their backs?

Pakiaka, the lean, essential debut volume by Gabrielle Huria, is a timely reminder of how good poetry can be at storytelling. The stories Huria tells are local and cosmic, firmly rooted in Ngai Tahu whakapapa and Te Waipounamu history but always attuned to the wide, interconnected world. These are accounts of stolen land and agricultural negligence, but also of tradition, connection, kaitiakitanga, birds, eels, rivers and winds. Of sharing kai and responsibilities. These are poems that scoff at our complacencies and ask a vital question: ‘Is this what Māori women do? Carry the world on their backs?