Kua Tau
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Kua Tau
From the beginning, Tainui Stephens has been finding stories. In people, in place, and in the shifting shape of Māori life in Aotearoa.
Across five decades of filmmaking, broadcasting and cultural advocacy, Tainui Stephens has been finding stories — in people, in place and in the shifting shape of Māori life in Aotearoa. Drawing especially on his much- loved essays for E-Tangata, this collection gathers a lifetime of reflections on the era of Māori reclamation, moving with ease between personal memory
and political insight.
From the turbulence of the 1970s and 1980s to the powerful iwi Māori of today, Stephens writes with an eye for the people who shaped him: kaumātua of the old world, marae aunties, rangatahi finding their place, activists, artists and friends. The essays range across reo and tikanga, identity, leadership, racism, joy and grief — touching on the Springbok Tour, commercial Māori television, kapa haka, a beloved family piano and the digital rituals of a new tangihanga era.
Warm, direct and deeply grounded, Kua Tau is a memoir from a superb storyteller — a collection for anyone curious about their own sliver of time on earth, and the stories that make us whole.
Book Details
INFORMATION
ISBN: 9781991301819
Publisher: Bridget Williams Books
Format: Paperback / softback
Date Published: 01 September 2026
Country: New Zealand
Imprint: Bridget Williams Books
Audience: General / adult
DIMENSIONS
Width: 138.0mm
Height: 210.0mm
Weight: 0g
Pages: 356
About the Author
Tainui Stephens (Te Rarawa) is one of Aotearoa’s most prominent Māori storytellers – a filmmaker, broadcaster and writer. He began at TVNZ in 1984, reporting for the pioneering Māori programme Koha, and has worked as a screen director, producer and presenter ever since. His directing credits include the documentaries When the Haka Became Boogie (1990), The New Zealand Wars (1998), Hitler and the Gumdiggers (2014) and Taumata 3001 (2025). He was a producer for the feature films River Queen (2005), The Dead Lands (2014), Whina (2022) and Holy Days (2025). In recent years he has written extensively for E-Tangata. He lives at Ōtaki Beach, where he is one of the five founders of the Māoriland Film Festival, alongside his wife and fellow filmmaker, Libby Hakaraia.
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