New Zealand Writers



ORBELL, Margaret
Her achievement is to preserve fidelity to the Maori texts and their cultural connotations.
Author entry from The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature, edited by Roger Robinson and Nelson Wattie (1998). About the Companion entries View list of Companion contributors
ORBELL, Margaret (1934– ), is the author of several books on Maori literature, tradition and belief, an editor of collections of songs, poetry and stories, and a leading interpreter of Maori texts to non-Maori audiences, including international ones.
Her major collections include Maori Folktales in Maori and English (1968); Traditional Songs of the Maori (1975, 1990, with Mervyn McLean); Maori Poetry: An Introductory Anthology (1978); Waiata: Maori Songs in History (1991); and Traditional Maori Stories (1992). Her achievement in such books is to preserve fidelity to the Maori texts and their cultural connotations while arranging, introducing and translating them in ways that make them accessible to other cultures.Her Illustrated Encyclopedia of Mäori Myth and Legend (1995) is a rich source of information on traditional literature, drawing on versions from many tribal areas and informatively illustrated.
Also of literary interest are Orbell’s editorship of Te *Ao Hou 1961–65; her compilation of the early anthology, Contemporary Maori Writing (1970); her Select Bibliography of the Oral Tradition of Oceania (UNESCO, Paris, 1978); and her consultant editorial role in the Penguin Book of New Zealand Verse (1985). Her 1970 anthology put several significant writers before a wider public, including Witi *Ihimaera (with the story that was the first version of *Tangi), Patricia *Grace, Harry *Dansey, Hirini *Mead and others.
Orbell’s MA at University of Auckland was in English; later (after teaching at Ruatoria, editing Te Ao Hou and studying Maori in Wellington with Wiremu Parker) she took her PhD at Auckland in anthropology with a thesis on *waiata aroha (love songs). After lecturing in Maori at Auckland 1974–75, she moved to University of Canterbury, retiring as associate professor in 1994 to become a full-time writer in Auckland, where she was born.
PN/RR/NW
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Birds of Aotearoa: A Natural and Cultural History (Reed Publishing, 2003) was a finalist in the environment category of the Montana New Zealand Book Awards 2004.



