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Alice Te Punga Somerville
Poet, scholar, and irredentist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Alice Te Punga Somerville (Te Āti Awa, Taranaki) is a poet, scholar and irredentist.[1] Dr Te Punga Somerville is the author of Once were Pacific: Māori connections to Oceania which provides the first critical analysis of the disconnections and connections between 'Māori' and 'Pacific'.[2] Her research work delves into texts by Māori, Pacific and Indigenous peoples that tell Indigenous stories in order to go beyond the constraints of the limited stories told about them.[3] In 2023 she won New Zealand's top award for poetry, the Mary and Peter Biggs Award for Poetry, for her collection Always Italicise: How to Write While Colonised.[4]
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Academic career
Since 2021, Te Punga Somerville is Professor of English and of Critical Indigenous Studies at the University of British Columbia. From 2017 to 2021, Te Punga Somerville was Associate Professor and Associate Dean of Faculty of Māori and Indigenous Studies at University of Waikato. Her previously held academic posts have been Senior Lecturer in the School of English at Victoria University of Wellington (2005–2012), Associate Professor Department of English University of Hawai'i at Manoa (2012–2015) and Senior Lecturer Department of Indigenous Studies at Macquarie University 2015 – 2017.[5] [6] Te Punga Somerville completed a Master of Arts in English at the University of Auckland. She then completed her PhD in English and American Indian Studies at Cornell University in 2004.
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Awards
- Fulbright Graduate Award recipient to study at Cornell University in Ithaca, NY
- Recipient of a Marsden Fast Start Grant ($140,000) for 'Once Were Pacific'
- Awarded Best First Book from the Native American & Indigenous Studies Association in 2012, for 'Once Were Pacific'
- S.W. Brooks Fellowship 2016, University of Queensland, Australia
- Recipient of Marsden Research Grant ($642,000) for the project 'Writing the new world: Indigenous texts '1900–1975'[7]
- Winner, Mary and Peter Biggs Award for Poetry for Always Italicise at the 2023 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards[4]
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Publications / works
- Te Punga Somerville, Alice. Once were Pacific: Māori connections to Oceania. University of Minnesota Press. 2012.[8]
- Te Punga Somerville, Alice. Two Hundred and Fifty Ways to Start an Essay about Captain Cook. Bridget Williams Books. 2020.[9]
- Te Punga Somerville, Alice. Always Italicise: How to write while colonised. Auckland University Press. 2022.[10]
Work appears in
- Rakuraku M. & Manasiadis V. 'Tātai Whetū: Seven Māori Women poets in translation'. Seraph Press. 2018.[11]
- Alison J. & Hoskins T. Critical Conversations in Kaupapa Māori. Huia Publishers. 2017.[12]
- Anderson W., Johnson M. & Brookes B. 'Pacific Futures: Past and Present' . University of Hawai‘i Press. 2018.[13]
- Wendt, Albert; Whaitiri, Reina; Sullivan, Robert, eds. (December 2002). Whetu Moana: Contemporary Polynesian Poetry in English. Auckland Univ Press. ISBN 9781869402730.[14]
- Whaitiri, Reina; Sullivan, Robert, eds. (September 2014). Puna Wai Kōrero: An Anthology of Māori Poetry in English. Auckland: Auckland University Press. ISBN 9781869408176.[15]
- Ruru J. & Nikora L. 'Ngā Kete Mātauranga: Māori Scholars at the Research Interface'. Otago University Press. 2021.[16]
References
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