Ki te kapu o takau ringa - In the Hollow of my Hand: Enfoques fotográficos basados en wānanga para la representación de lugares
Resumen
Ka matakitaki iho au ki te riu o Waikato
Ano nei hei kapo kau ake maaku;
Ki te kapu o taku ringa,
"Miro hacia el valle de Waikato,
Como si lo tuviera
En el hueco de mi mano".
Las palabras anteriores pertenecen al maioha (poema cantado) del rey maorí Tawhiao, una representación de su amor por su tierra natal del Waikato y la región conocida hoy como el País del Rey. Ahora imagine una fotografía a gran escala: un primer plano de manos ahuecadas, sosteniendo un objeto con cuidado. La frase anterior informa el actual proyecto de investigación del profesor Tom Roa y el Dr. Rodrigo Hill, titulado "Te Nehenehenui - La antigua belleza perdurable en el gran bosque del King Country". Con este proyecto aún en sus primeras etapas, el equipo de investigación presentará los primeros y actuales desarrollos de la práctica creativa, debates e ideas sobre la práctica de la fotografía, wānanga, y la representación del lugar. El proyecto promueve el uso de wānanga (foros y reuniones de grupos focales a través de los cuales se discute y transmite el conocimiento -mātauranga-) y otras prácticas reflexivas, comprometidas con y dirigidas por mana whenua (guardianes de la tierra) proporcionando un hilo conductor que guiará la construcción de las imágenes fotográficas. La investigación fusiona wānanga, es decir, Mātauranga Māori (conocimiento maorí), y la práctica fotográfica de forma novedosa, con el objetivo de alejarse y desafiar las convenciones fotográficas básicas y los modos eurocéntricos de representación del lugar. Roa y Hill entienden la wānanga como una práctica fluida de compromiso que puede ser con el mana whenua o con el taiao -el entorno-, ya sea por sí mismo o con el mana whenua. Esta es la esencia de la investigación Kaupapa Māori.
Citas
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