Spiralling Histories: Reflections on the 1923 Dominion Museum East Coast Ethnological Expedition and Other Multimedia Experiments.

Authors

  • Anne Salmond University of Auckland
  • Billie Lythberg University of Auckland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15286/jps.128.1.43-64

Keywords:

Apirana Ngata, Dominion Museum, ethnological expeditions, historical photography, whakapapa ‘kin networks’, East Coast, Ngāti Porou, James McDonald

Abstract

In March and April 1923 the Dominion Museum undertook an ethnological expedition to the East Coast region of New Zealand’s North Island, which was initiated and hosted by politician and scholar Apirana Ngata. Along with researchers Johannes Andersen, Elsdon Best and Peter Buck (Te Rangihīroa), the Museum’s acting director, James McDonald, took photographs and made films which recorded the cultural practices and traditions of the Ngāti Porou people. These traces in manuscripts, photographs and movies of the relationships that shaped the expeditions still travel through space and time, spiralling into the future as they allow contemporary and future listeners and viewers to reconnect with the past. Although these people have long since died, they live on in McDonald’s films and photographs, along with the many Māori people from the communities they visited, in documentation of ways of life which provide invaluable resources for cultural heritage and contemporary tribal development today. In this paper, McDonald’s uri ‘descendant’ (his great-granddaughter Anne Salmond) and Billie Lythberg reconstruct the activities of the team on the expedition, drawing on a rich range of archival and other sources, and then reflect on the meaning of these “reflections” drawn with light on wax cylinders, nitrate film and paper, as well as current digital technology. Whether present in these recordings or as the eyes through which we see and the ears through which we hear, these hoa aroha ‘dear friends’—McDonald, Ngata, Buck, Andersen and Best—cannot be disentangled from the archive, the people who hosted them, and the whakaahua ‘images’ they created together.

Author Biographies

Anne Salmond, University of Auckland

Anne Salmond is a Distinguished Professor of Māori Studies and Anthropology at the University of Auckland. She has won many prizes and international honours for her writings on Māori life and on early European voyaging in the Pacific. In 1995 she was made Dame Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire for services to historical research. She is a Foreign Associate of the National Academy of Sciences in the USA, a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy and a Fellow of the American Philosophical Society. In 2013 she was awarded the Rutherford Medal, New Zealand’s top scientific award, and selected as New Zealander of the Year; and in 2018 she was awarded the Carl Friedrich von Siemens Research Award by the Humboldt Foundation for lifetime achievements in research.

Billie Lythberg, University of Auckland

Billie Lythberg is Senior Research Fellow at the University of Auckland Business School, New Zealand, working at the junction of economics, anthropology and history. Her research explores Oceanic sciences, arts and oral histories; cross-cultural theories of value, valuables and valuation; intellectual and cultural property; sustainability and environmental management; digital repatriation and social innovation. Billie is co-editor of Artefacts of Encounter: Cook’s Voyages, Colonial Collecting and Museum Histories (University of Otago Press, 2016) and Collecting in the South Sea: The Voyage of Bruni d’Entrecasteaux 1791–1794 (Sidestone Press, 2018). She is currently working across four projects funded by the Marsden Fund, Royal Society of New Zealand, including Te Ao Hou.

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Published

2019-04-02