Publicly accessible
URL: http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/collections.html
copyright 2007, by Victoria University of Wellington
Prepared for the
Some keywords in the header are a local Electronic Text Collection scheme to aid in establishing analytical groupings.
This bibliography has been compiled to accompany the material collected for the "Moko; or Maori Tattooing" Project. The project looked to digitise Moko; or Maori Tattooing, while also showing an awareness of the issues surrounding the digitisation of Mātauranga Māori and the online representation of ancestral remains. In addition to the
Collected here are access points to other supplementary online resources relating to these topics. It is not intended to be a comprehensive list of online material about these topics, but instead to provide an introduction to them. For an extensive bibliography of published and unpublished material see the bibliography of Robley: Te Ropere, 1840–1930.
Ta Moko refers to the practice of Māori tattooing. There is a wide variety of information available on this subject, both in print and in digital form. Historical accounts of Ta Moko were predominantly written by clergymen and ethnographers who had an interest in the Māori populations that they encountered. Contemporary material is often generated by either academics or practitioners. Occasionally, references find there way into the news, as can be seen in the news articles below.
The creation of mokamokai has been documented, and the meaning behind their creation speculated upon, by many historians. This practice was sometimes laid alongside that of cannibalism, in that the decidely 'un-Christian' treatment of the dead shocked and titillated European readers. The trade in heads also caught the eye of European settlers.
Current perspectives on mokamokai generally relate to their repatriation to New Zealand and their identification. Throughout the years, as iwi and the Government took an interest in recovering mokamokai from overseas, there have been news and journal articles relating to these efforts. Who should have custody and what should happen with the heads when they have been returned have also generated a lot of discussion.
For a comprehensive overview of mokamokai and repatriation in the media, there are two paper files (Repatriation and Repatriation of Mokamokai) available for viewing in the Te Aka Matua Library and Information Centre at Te Papa Tongarewa, Wellington.
Moko book elevated him, in the eyes of historians and ethnographers, to an expert in moko and he is frequently quoted in texts about the topic. Because of his standing, his art appears in a wide range of publications and justifies his inclusion in collected biographies of artists.