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Alice Te Punga Somerville Alice Te Punga Somerville i(8906407 works by)
Gender: Female
Heritage: New Zealander
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Works By

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1 Reading as Cousins : Indigenous Texts, Pacific Bookshelves Alice Te Punga Somerville , 2024 single work criticism
— Appears in: JASAL , 4 November vol. 23 no. 2 2024;

'In a 1973 article “Aboriginal Literature” published in the magazine New Dawn, Oodgeroo Noonuccal writes: “It would also be to our benefit to meet with and know writers of New Zealand and the Pacific and of other lands where the indigene has made his or her way into the field of literature.” In this lecture I will respond, almost 50 years later, to her invitation to imagine the intellectual, political and creative “benefit” of Indigenous-Indigenous connection in the context of literary studies. Specifically, I will reflect on the idea of being ‘cousins’ – close kin in some contexts but virtual strangers in others – as a possible approach to thinking about the relational work of Indigenous and Pacific literary studies.  As a Māori scholar of Pacific literatures, I ask: How and where do Indigenous writers and literary scholars from the Pacific “meet with” Indigenous Australia? What does it mean to “know” one another as Indigenous peoples from cultural and historical contexts that are vastly different yet also deeply familiar? How is the Pacific bookshelf reconfigured when texts and writers from Indigenous Australia are present, and vice versa? What texts, writers, networks and intellectual work become visible when Indigenous-Indigenous relationships are the starting point for a story about the study of Australian literatures? How might conversations about settler colonialism, trans-Indigenous literary methodologies and Native Pacific Cultural Studies contribute to our thinking about – and creation of – modes of relationship that centre and stand in solidarity with Indigenous sovereignty?' (Publication abstract)

1 Behind Every Job Ad in Indigenous Studies i "there are countless meetings at which mouths were fired", Alice Te Punga Somerville , 2023 single work poetry
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , no. 109 2023;
1 Kupu Rere Kē i "My friend was advised to italicise all the foreign words in her poems.", Alice Te Punga Somerville , 2021 single work poetry
— Appears in: Cordite Poetry Review , no. 100 2021;
1 Indigenous Currency : The Art of Being a Guest Alice Te Punga Somerville , 2015 single work criticism
— Appears in: Courting Blakness : Recalibrating Knowledge in the Sandstone University 2015; (p. 156-163)
Ryan Presley's work titled Debt is a sculpture that spells 'change' with an 'x' in the front, so it reads as 'change' as well as 'exchange'...'
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