Reweaving the Spaces of Inter-Cultural Dialogue in Post-Treaty New Zealand/Aotearoa
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Date
2025-06-01
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Taylor and Francis Group on behalf of the World Communication Association
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(c) 2025 The Author/s
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Abstract
This study explores cross-cultural dialogue between Māori and settler colonials through the lens of Emily Karaka’s paintings. Karaka’s paintings are used to probe and reveal the colonial roots of spatial organization at the site where they are displayed. Building on parallels between the life of Karaka’s paintings and Treaty of Waitangi documents, this study finds that post-Treaty dialogue between Māori and settler colonials takes place in spaces built on and informed by the spatial biases of settler colonialism. The study concludes that recognizing these biases is crucial for meaningful dialogue and suggests that the Treaty of Waitangi invites a spatial response.
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Reweaving the Spaces of Inter-Cultural Dialogue in Post-Treaty New Zealand/Aotearoa, Space, Cross-cultural dialogue, settler colonialism, identity, Maori, New Zealand
Citation
Chrystall A. (2025). Reweaving the Spaces of Inter-Cultural Dialogue in Post-Treaty New Zealand/Aotearoa. Journal of Intercultural Communication Research. (pp. 1-16).
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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as (c) 2025 The Author/s

