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Unfortunately, this event’s been postponed
Knowledge Is A Blessing On Your Mind: Wānanga and Science: POSTPONED

Dates

  • Mon 14 Sep 2020, 6:00pm–7:00pm

Restrictions

All Ages

Dame Anne Salmond, Distinguished Professor of Māori Studies and Anthropology at the University of Auckland, will deliver the 2020 Friends of the Turnbull Library Founder Lecture.

Annual Founders Lecture
Join us for the annual Founders Lecture and hear from Dame Anne Salmond. Dame Anne is a Distinguished Professor of Māori Studies and Anthropology at the University of Auckland, whose profoundly significant books have helped New Zealanders understand themselves and appreciate their cultural heritage. She is also a passionate supporter of the Alexander Turnbull Library.

The Friends of the Turnbull Library will provide refreshments after the lecture.

About Alexander Turnbull
The Library’s founder, Alexander Horsburgh Turnbull, was born on 14 September 1868. He developed a passion for collecting everything he could that was published in, or about, New Zealand and the Pacific, and to significant works of literature.

When he died on 28 June 1918 Turnbull made what was described in the ‘New Zealand Times’ in July 1918 as ‘the most generous bequest to the people of New Zealand since the beginning of New Zealand Time’. The collection comprised over 55,000 books, along with thousands of original artworks, prints and maps.

These collections have been built through donation, bequest, legal deposit and targeted purchase, to contain millions of items in many different formats. The Turnbull Library opened to the public on 28 June 1920.

About the speaker
Dame Anne Salmond is a Distinguished Professor of Māori Studies and Anthropology at the University of Auckland, and a leading social scientist. She is the first New Zealander to be elected a fellow of both the US National Academy of Sciences and the British Academy. A former Vice-President (Social Sciences and Humanities) of the Royal Society of New Zealand and the first social scientist to be awarded the Rutherford Medal, New Zealand’s top scientific prize, she is also deeply involved in New Zealand’s public life as a scholar and communicator.

In 2013 she was chosen as the Kiwibank New Zealander of the Year. Dame Anne Salmond is the author of many significant books on New Zealand’s histories. These include ‘Amiria: the life story of a Māori woman’ (1976), ‘Two worlds: first meetings between Maori and Europeans, 1642-1772 (1991) ‘The trial of the cannibal dog: Captain Cook in the South Seas’ (2003), and ‘Tears of Rangi: Experiments Across Worlds’ (2017) Anne Salmond is the host of the ‘Artefact’ documentary series with Māori TV.

In August 2020 Dame Anne was awarded the Caird Medal from the UK’s National Maritime Museum for her ‘great contributions to scholarly and public understanding of Māori history, the history of Pacific voyaging and cross-cultural exchange’.

Image: Distinguished Professor Dame Anne Salmond is a of Māori Studies and Anthropology at the University of Auckland. Photograph supplied.

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