Vā Moana

Vā Moana

Space and Relationality in Pacific Thought and Identity

Edited by: Albert L. Refiti, A.-Chr. Engels-Schwarzpaul, Lana Lopesi, Billie Lythberg, Arielle Walker, Emily Parr

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Description

Vā may be a small word, but it carries expansive meaning. Rooted in Indigenous Pacific knowledges—Samoan vā, Tongan tā-vā, Māori and Hawaiian wā—this concept of relational space binds people, ancestors and cosmologies across time and place. Since the late 1990s, vā has become a powerful framework in academic and cultural contexts, energising conversations across Oceania and beyond.

As the world grapples with the rise of hyper-individualism, vā offers an urgent and restorative alternative: one that centres connection, responsibility and collective belonging. This rich collection of individually and collaboratively authored chapters explores how vā, wā, and related Indigenous concepts are lived, theorised and practised today. Drawing from diverse disciplines and grounded in specific cultural contexts, these contributions deepen our understanding of relationality, space and place across the Moana.

The AUT Vā Moana Research Centre is dedicated to exploring spatial concepts through Moananui (Pacific) thought. Established in 2012 by Albert L. Refiti and A.-Chr. Engels-Schwarzpaul at Auckland University of Technology’s School of Art and Design, Vā Moana brings together a vibrant international network of scholars. Their work reimagines how space is understood and experienced, both in contemporary and customary Pacific contexts.

Details

ISBN (print):
9781760467234
ISBN (online):
9781760467241
Imprint:
ANU Press
DOI:
http://doi.org/10.22459/VM.2026
Series:
Pacific Series
Disciplines:
Arts & Humanities: Cultural Studies; Social Sciences: Anthropology
Countries:
Pacific

PDF Chapters

Vā Moana »

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I. Whakapapa: Samoan, Tongan, Māori and Hawaiian origins

  1. Vā atoa and the ever-moving-present in the Samoan cosmogony Solo o le Vā (PDF, 1.3 MB)Albert L. Refiti
  2. Wā speculations and the realm of possibility (PDF, 209 KB)Te Ahukaramū Charles Royal with Brett Graham
  3. Kū ‘o Wākea i ka Wā: Expanding Hawaiian time and space on the Mauna (PDF, 915 KB)Kalei Nuʻuhiwa and Ty P. Kāwika Tengan
  4. ‘The plurality of hoa’: Tā-vā and Moana thought in the work of Hūfanga-He-Ako-Moe-Lotu ‘Ōkusitino Māhina, an interview (PDF, 234 KB)Hūfanga-He-Ako-Moe-Lotu ‘Ōkusitino Māhina with Albert L. Refiti
  5. Tauhi fonua, tauhi vā (PDF, 190 KB)Tēvita O. Kaʻili with Albert L. Refiti and Ata Siulua

II. Sea of islands: Vā within global constellations

  1. Oceania: The shape of time (PDF, 639 KB)Maia Nuku
  2. Oceania’s crucible effect, Moana Cosmopolitans and the reinvention of vā (PDF, 264 KB)A.-Chr. Engels-Schwarzpaul and Albert L. Refiti
  3. Vā Moana: A relational geography for Moana Cosmopolitan worlds (PDF, 230 KB)Lana Lopesi
  4. Conser.VĀ.tion | Acti.VĀ.tion: Culti.VĀ.ting niu museology practices through the Vā Body (PDF, 1.2 MB)Rosanna Raymond
  5. The spiralling stories of Moana of the South Seas: Between colonial panoramas and vā relations (PDF, 257 KB)Aaron Nyerges

III. Tauhi vā: Vā in diaspora

  1. Teu le vā as Indigenous relationality in contemporary museological praxis (PDF, 621 KB)Melani Anae and Leone Samu Tui
  2. Tausiga ʻo Vā: The vā relational turn in 1990s Pacific art (PDF, 210 KB)Ioane Ioane, Lemi Ponifasio, Brett Graham and Lily Aitui Laita with Albert L. Refiti
  3. Three-dimensional whakapapa as a manifestation of the vā/wā (PDF, 2.3 MB)Brett Graham
  4. Culture matters: Vā and wā in contemporary youth justice (PDF, 254 KB)Tamasailau Suaalii-Sauni, Robert Webb and Juan Tauri
  5. Designing with wā: Mapping Kanaka ‘Ōiwi spatial ontologies (PDF, 1.2 MB)James Miller

IV. Whānau whānui: Expansive relationality, place-making and online vā

  1. Placepersons: Places that relate through work and migration in Papua New Guinea (PDF, 206 KB)Jamon Halvaksz
  2. Click, connect, karakia! Tikanga for online connections (PDF, 217 KB)Valance Smith
  3. The vā of sound, voice, music-making and performance for Moana people (PDF, 214 KB)Tanya Volentras
  4. Mele of resistance: Spanning three wā of aloha ʻāina in action (PDF, 320 KB)Kahikina de Silva
  5. Place to place, space to space: Huakaʻi hele as decolonial praxis and the tidalectic repertoires of place (PDF, 648 KB)Halena Kapuni-Reynolds
  6. Vā theory and theorising beyond into the vahanoa: Post–human rhythmic conditions in Tu‘atonga (PDF, 693 KB)David Taufui Mikato Fa‘avae