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n Erana Cooper – “learning the language of the heart” n Emotions are a vocabulary in building relationships n Supported by research & theorising locally & elsewhere Ingrid Huygens Engaging with Maori: Using our heads and hearts
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Keynote points from Erana Cooper Be informed about history Our emotional responses situated in long histories of the Maori-Tauiwi relationship Understand how historical & contemporary actions generate protest & struggle for Maori Incorporate understanding of historical trauma into our practice as psychologists
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“Emotion is the chief source of all becoming- consciousness. There can be no transforming of darkness into light and of apathy into movement without emotion” (Jung, 1938)
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How are tauiwi doing with the language of the heart? 1700s – 1860s 1700s – 1860s Needed and wanted a relationship, negotiated a treaty 1850s – 1970s brutal indifference 1850s – 1970s Pakeha had numbers & ideology – brutal indifference 1970s onwards 1970s onwards Re-engagement, asking ‘Why are you angry?’ Ongoing ignoring + listening Ongoing complacency + remorse Ongoing dismissal + discomfort Ongoing betrayals + changes
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Emotions in patterns of relationship (Gergen & colleagues, 1994) Emotions are features, not of individuals, but of relationships Emotions are internal events within relationships, intelligible through cultural interpretations Emotional sequences are cultural habits, so.... there are always new patterns that can be learned
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Emotional sequences (Gergen & colleagues, 1994) Anger – query – explanation (blame) – anger /defense/hostility – anger..... Anger – query – blame – remorse – caution/compassion/anger... Anger – query – explanation – empathy/ confirmation... Some emotions were end-points – guilt, acknowledgment, confirmation
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Question: How do Pakeha change? Network Waitangi Whanganui-a-Tara, 2003
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Pakeha awakenings through - Emotional responses to stories of pain & struggle Standing in the shoes of the other – empathy, compassion Shock at disturbing statistics Network Waitangi Whangarei, 2003
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First steps in learning & change for Pakeha/t First steps in learning & change for Pakeha/tauiwi - shock, pain, grief Responding to Maori stories of pain and dispossession – shock, pain, grief... discomfort, unease, remorse Being critically challenged by Maori – discomfort, unease, remorse... gratitude, ease, confidence Being immersed in supportive Maori environments – gratitude, ease, confidence... Network Waitangi Otepoti, 2003
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Network Waitangi Otautahi, 2003
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Waitangi Associates, 2003
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Hawkes Bay Treaty workers, 2003 empathy, guilt & fearaction & hope Work with our processes of empathy, guilt & fear to create myriad connections of action & hope, by... Emotional work in Maori-Tauiwi relationships Emotional work in Maori-Tauiwi relationships -
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Freedom Roadworks, 2003 Decolonisation for tauiwi Decolonisation for tauiwi – pain & vulnerability Feeling pain & vulnerability of own ancestors displaced from their lands denial & distancing Understanding process of denial & distancing of such history Relief & hope Relief & hope at building new relationships in this country
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Weber & Carter (2003) Trust as optimism, a distinctive way of seeing the other flavoured by expectation of goodwill from the other. Requires a shared moral code in the social milieu Megan Boler (1999) Emotions guide moral & ethical evaluations, help us envision future possibilities and who we want to become. Promising work elsewhere
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Promising local work Maria Humphries, Betsan Martin & Te Kawehou Hoskins Relational ethics Response-ability in relationship.
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Promising local work Arama Rata Forgiveness is the END of a complex process of: rongo rongo (commitment to restore relationships) whakapapa whakapapa (interconnectedness between people, places, and events over time, forming identity) kaupapa kaupapa (agenda based on costs/benefits of forgiveness).
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Contact Ingrid Huygens for conference paper workwise@pl.net workwise@pl.net Using the language of the heart is complex, and necessary,,,
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References Boler, M. (1999). Feeling power: Emotions and education. New York: Routledge. Campbell, R. (2000). The emotionality of social change. The Community Psychologist, 32(5), 16-18. Gergen, K. J. (1994). Realities and relationships: Soundings in social construction (pp. Chapter 9, P. 210-235 Emotion in relationship). Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. Huygens, I. (2007). Processes of Pakeha change in response to the Treaty of Waitangi. Hamilton: University of Waikato. Narayan, U. (1988). Working together across difference: Some considerations on emotions and political practice. Hypatia, 3(2), 31-47. Rata, A., Liu, J. H., & Hanke, K. (2008). Te Ara Hohou Rongo (The Path to Peace): Maori Conceptualisations of Inter-group Forgiveness. New Zealand Journal of Psychology, 37(2 July). Weber, L. R., & Carter, A. I. (2003). The social construction of trust. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers.
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