“The past does not lie behind us”: Warrior-matriarchs’ retrotopia in Witi Ihimaera’s fiction
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Rodríguez Salas, GerardoEditorial
SAGE Publications
Materia
Imperial democracy Kaupapa Māori Mana Wāhine
Date
2023-12-30Referencia bibliográfica
Rodríguez-Salas, G. (2023). “The past does not lie behind us”: Warrior-matriarchs’ retrotopia in Witi Ihimaera’s fiction. The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, 0(0). https://doi.org/10.1177/00219894231219111
Patrocinador
Research project “Secrecy, democracy and dissidence in the contemporary novel in English” (PID2019-104526GB-100), funded by the Spanish Ministry of EducationRésumé
Contrary to an apolitical, pessimistic, and non-feminist perception of Witi Ihimaera’s work, this
article contends that his early novel The Matriarch (1986) and its sequel The Dream Swimmer
(1997) frame Māori communities as an ancient, patriarchal space in need of revision to
accommodate women. Reconsidering the role of tribalism and Māori utopian and cyclical land
narratives, this study argues that the confessional male narrator of both novels, Tamatea Mahana,
learns to embrace a matrilineal genealogy not only of powerful Māori women leaders of chiefly
status, but also of charismatic women in the shadow, like his mother Tiana. Beyond Pākehā
imperial democracy and Māori “male utopias of domination”, Tamatea and the exceptional
gallery of warrior-matriarchs implement a peculiar and controversial retrotopia — a return to
the prematurely buried grand ideas of the past — which, even when dangerously resonating
with nostalgia, aims at an open-ended model of democracy through spiral temporality.1 A
predominantly decolonizing theory and methodology is used, drawing on Kaupapa Māori and
Mana Wāhine theories.