
- 316 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
M?ori journalism in Aotearoa New Zealand has become a vibrant industry, reporting throughprint, radio, television and the internet. This book looks at the history of M?ori journalism and theelements that make it what it is today. The \author examines the way that news values common in English-speaking countries are reinterpreted for a M?ori worldview and analyses news stories toshow how M?ori perspectives are expressed. She also identifies how elements of whaik?rero havebeen refashioned for news and the ways tapu and noa are managed by news teams. A host of well-known reporters share their perspectives on their work. They describe how they got into reporting, and we learn what happens as they gather information and produce their stories. In particular, we see how these journalists balance the demands of journalism and tikanga.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover page
- Title page
- Copyright
- Contents
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- 1 KO TE HOROPAKI: Setting the Scene
- 2 KO TE WHAKAPAPA O TE MAHI TĀ HAURAPA KŌRERO: The History of Māori Print Journalism
- 3 KO TE WHAKAPAPA O NGĀ PŪRONGO IRIRANGI REO MĀORI: The History of Māori-language News on Radio
- 4 KO TE POUAKA WHAKAATA ME TE IPURANGI: Māori News and Current Affairs on State and Commercial Television
- 5 HE WHAKANGUNGU KAIKAWEKŌRERO: Māori Journalism Training – Many Paths to the Newsroom
- 6 KO TE ĀHUATANGA O TE MAHI: Analysing News Values and the Māori Perspective
- 7 KO TE REO KIA RERE: Māori Journalists as Agents of Language Revitalisation
- 8 TIHEI MAURI ORA!: Elements of Whaikōrero in News
- 9 KO TE WERO: Tikanga, Relationships and the Māori Reporter
- 10 KO TE TAPU ME TE KAIRĪPOATA MĀORI: The Influence of Tapu on News Work
- 11 KEI MUA: What Lies Ahead?
- ENDNOTES
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- INDEX
- Backcover