Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://elea.unisa.it/xmlui/handle/10556/7388
Title: Channelling a Haunting: Deconstructing Settler Memory and Forgetting about New Zealand History at National Institutions
Authors: MacDonald, Liana
Bellas, Kim
Gardenier, Emma
Green, Adrienne J.
Keywords: Difficult histories;New Zealand Wars;Haunting;Museums;Education;Indigeneity
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: L. MacDonald, K. Bellas, E. Gardenier, A.J. Green, Channelling a Haunting: Deconstructing Settler Memory and Forgetting about New Zealand History at National Institutions, Public History Review, 29 (2022), 142–155.
Citation: Liana MacDonald, Kim Bellas, Emma Gardenier, Adrienne J. Green, Channelling a Haunting: Deconstructing Settler Memory and Forgetting about New Zealand History at National Institutions, Public History Review, 29 (2022), 142–155.
Abstract: The Aotearoa New Zealand’s Histories curriculum will be compulsory in 2023; what and how New Zealand history will be taught is currently up for debate. An innovative approach to engaging key curriculum understandings like colonisation, settlement and power would recognise that settler sensibilities frame national histories, to make visible the ongoing structuring force of colonisation. To this end, we present a model for teaching students how to consider a relationship between national identity, collective memory, and colonial history; to read settler cultural bias embedded in national institutions. Channelling a haunting is a process whereby students are encouraged to think and feel as though absent and silenced histories of colonial violence are not resolved, and to critique how settler memory and forgetting about New Zealand history permeates exhibitions at national institutions. Findings from a small group of student teachers who were channelling a haunting at two museums housing documents of national significance show how lovely and difficult knowledge about colonial history can create a sense of embodied racial comfort that legitimises the status quo. Rather than perceive national institutions as culturally neutral, students of all ages may be taught to critically analyse how they are biased to settler perspectives.
URI: https://doi.org/10.5130/phrj.v29i0.8218
http://elea.unisa.it/xmlui/handle/10556/7388
ISSN: 1833-4989
Appears in Collections:Contributi in rivista / Contributions in journals and magazines

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