AUT LibraryAUT
View Item 
  •   Open Research
  • AUT Faculties
  • Faculty of Culture and Society
  • School of Education
  • View Item
  •   Open Research
  • AUT Faculties
  • Faculty of Culture and Society
  • School of Education
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

A Typology of Pākehā “Whiteness” in Education

Stewart, GT
Thumbnail
View/Open
Journal article (271.3Kb)
Permanent link
http://hdl.handle.net/10292/14811
Metadata
Show full metadata
Abstract
This article presents a typology to unpack the notion of ‘Whiteness’ as it operates in contemporary Māori-Pākehā relationships in Aotearoa New Zealand, within social domains such as education. This five-point typology of Whiteness aims to include the main positions commonly taken by Pākehā in their dealings with Māori in education. The names of these five positions depict, with dramatic effect, the central orientation of each one: Exterminator, Overlord, Vampire, Savior/Saviour, and Ally. An important disclaimer about this typology is that it relates to attitudes and ideas, not persons. Most people tend to hold individualised and changeable mixes of attitudes and ideas about complex social scenarios such as intercultural relationships, so such a typology cannot and is not intended to ‘classify’ people. It must be noted, however, that only the Ally position is politically robust, in terms of countering White Privilege and providing authentic support for Māori interests. Given the complicated issues involved, this typology may help Pākehā and Māori scholars in education and related fields to generate new insights about the range of attitudes held by Pākehā towards Māori things. Such a typology may even help encourage some Pākehā to commit to undertaking the work required to shift towards the kinds of understanding and attitudes characteristic of White Allies.
Date
2020
Source
Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies, DOI: 10.1080/10714413.2020.1773177
Item Type
Journal Article
Publisher
Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
DOI
10.1080/10714413.2020.1773177
Publisher's Version
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10714413.2020.1773177
Rights Statement
Copyright © 2020 Taylor & Francis. Authors retain the right to place his/her pre-publication version of the work on a personal website or institutional repository as an electronic file for personal or professional use, but not for commercial sale or for any systematic external distribution by a third. This is an electronic version of an article published in (see Citation). Review of Education, Pedagogy and Cultural Studies is available online at: www.tandfonline.com with the open URL of your article (see Publisher’s Version).

Contact Us
  • Admin

Hosted by Tuwhera, an initiative of the Auckland University of Technology Library

 

 

Browse

Open ResearchTitlesAuthorsDateSchool of EducationTitlesAuthorsDate

Alternative metrics

 

Statistics

For this itemFor all Open Research

Share

 
Follow @AUT_SC

Contact Us
  • Admin

Hosted by Tuwhera, an initiative of the Auckland University of Technology Library