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Potiki - Coggle Diagram
Potiki
Lack of understanding between cultures
Dialogue with ellipsis
"I hope I've made it clear. There would be no damage. Your hall... Whare tipuna. Ancestral house... would be put on trucks, transported, no cost to you"
Lack of respect
Tamihana whanau = Disengaged and devalued by dollarman
Maori culture ignored
"as I've discussed with Mr um... here and... one or two others
Dollarman is uncomfortable, doesn't make an effort to learn Maori names (to hard)
Dollarman comfortable in a familiar environment, would know english names
Grace is strategic in her placement, heightens Dollarman ignorance and assumption of power
Inequality of the justice system
Dispassionate language
Urupa and gardens destroyed:
"the investigation, the police and that? They won't do anything. Nothing good will come.. for us. But anyway
Tamihana become immune to the inequality of the justice system
Not worth their time and energy to be emotive
Tangimoana in court:
"We were not believed. There was evidence, we gave help, but we were not... understood, and not believed
The Pakeha were taken seriously but the Tamihana whanau wasn't taken seriously
Had the same amount of evidence for each crime however only the pakeha crime was escalated
Grace is skilful in her timing, placement and the characters she attaches the language to. They have been repeatedly beaten down, to the point they have given up.
Oppression of indigenous cultures
Te Reo Maori without a glossary
"Kehua" and "Whenua"
Makes Pakeha readers feel uncomfortable and disempowered
Helps pakeha to feel what Maori feel
Empowers Maori, represent Māori language and gives the language importance
"urupa", wharenui" and "marae"
using tradtional words gives importance and place in society
normalises the words
disempowers pakeha but not enough to stop reading. Enough for Māori to see a positive change and feel empowered