Te Pouhere Kōrero – Māori History, Māori People
The first volume of Te Pouhere Kōrero – Māori History, Māori People was published in 1999, with ten volumes in total published by 2023. The journal focuses on Māori and Indigenous history. It is peer-reviewed and has an editorial executive. Hard copies of Volume 10 (2023) can be purchased in all good bookshops and through Bridget Williams Books.
All ten volumes have now been digitised (with support from Creative New Zealand and Te Kura Tangata Arts at the University of Auckland); they are available in the New Zealand History Collection, which can be found in all subscribing libraries, including public, tertiary and school libraries. Please contact collections@bwb.co.nz for help in accessing this rich digital resource.
Te Pouhere Kōrero
Te Pouhere Kōrero operates as a broad collective of Māori colleagues interested in history. It was established in November 1992, at an inaugural hui convened at Rongopai Marae at Waituhi, near Gisborne, Aotearoa New Zealand. The group includes local whānau, hapū and iwi experts, librarians, museum curators, school teachers, Treaty claims researchers, public servants and academics. Members have included scholars and writers such as Keri Kaa, Miria Simpson and Manuka Henare, as well as Charles Royal, Danny Keenan and Monty Soutar.
Te Pouhere Kōrero operates as a crucial space – explicitly for Māori, by Māori and about Māori - to discuss and debate the issues and ideas that are important to us in ways that make sense to us. It is a place to debrief, share our mahi and re-energise while sharing and promoting mātauranga and Māori perspectives on history to wider audiences.