TY - JFULL ED - Lampart, Fabian ED - Hillebrandt, Claudia ED - Klimek, Sonja ED - Müller, Ralph T1 - Poema BT - Jahrbuch für Lyrikforschung BT - Annual for the Study of Lyric Poetry BT - La recherche annuelle en poésie lyrique N2 - POEMA ist ein komparatistisch angelegtes Jahrbuch, das sich der systematischen Erforschung von Lyrik und Gedicht widmet. Es richtet sich an Fachwissenschaftlerinnen und Fachwissenschaftler aller Phi­lologien wie auch der mit anderen Kunstformen befassten Wissenschaften und der philosophischen Ästhetik. POEMA erscheint als Open-Access-Journal wie auch als Print-on-Demand-Fassung im Uni­versitätsverlag Kiel | Kiel University Publishing. Die wissenschaftlichen Beiträge werden in einem double-blind Peer-Review-Verfahren begutachtet. N2 - POEMA is a yearbook dedicated to the systematic and comparative study of lyric poetry and poems. It aims at scholars from all fields of philology and philosophy of arts as well as other fields of research concerned with different art forms and philosophical aesthetics. POEMA is published as an open-access e-journal as well as a print-on-demand version by Kiel University Publishing. The academic contributions are selected in a double-blind peer-review process. N2 - POEMA est un annuaire comparatiste consacré à l'étude systématique de la poésie et du poème. Il s'adresse aux spécialistes de toutes les philologies ainsi qu'à ceux des autres disciplines occupées par d'autres formes d'art et à l'esthétique philosophique. POEMA paraît sous forme de journal en accès libre sur l'internet ainsi qu'en version imprimée à la demande aux éditions universitaires de Kiel | Kiel University Publishing. Les articles sont évaluées dans le cadre d'une procédure de peer review en double aveugle. Y1 - 2023 UR - https://macau.uni-kiel.de/receive/macau_mods_00002991 SN - 2751-9821 SN - 2751-9813 VL - 2 PB - Universitätsverlag Kiel CY - Kiel ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Eckstein, Lars T1 - Hawaiki according to Tupaia BT - glimpses of knowing home in precolonial remote Oceania JF - Zeitschrift für Anglistik und Amerikanistik : ZAA ; a quarterly of language, literature and culture N2 - This essay looks into the concept of an ancestral homeland in Remote Oceania, commonly referred to as Hawaiki (‘Avaiki; Havai‘i; Hawai‘i). Hawaiki intriguingly challenges Eurocentric notions of ‘home.’ Following the rapid settlement of the so-called Polynesian triangle from Samoa/Tonga at around 1000 AD, Hawaiki has emerged as a concept that is both mythological and real; genealogical and geographic; singular and yet portable, existing in plural regional manifestations. I argue that predominantly Pakeha/Popa‘ā research trying to identify Hawaiki as a singular and geographically fixed homeland is misleading. I tap into the archive surrounding the Ra‘iātean tahu‘a and master navigator Tupaia who joined Captain Cook’s crew during his first voyage to the Pacific to offer glimpses of an alternative ontology of home and epistemology of Oceanic ‘homing.’ KW - Hawaiki KW - Tupaia’s Map KW - Oceania KW - Indigenous ontology and epistemology Y1 - 2023 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1515/zaa-2023-2006 SN - 0044-2305 SN - 2196-4726 VL - 71 IS - 1 SP - 55 EP - 69 PB - de Gruyter CY - Berlin ER -