AY Honors/Māori Lore/Answer Key

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Poi dance, by Manutuke School at Hopuhopu, New Zealand, 2003

Poi is a form of juggling 'Impartial Art' & (Finnigan, 1992) with balls on ropes, held in the hands and swung in various circular patterns, similar to club-twirling. It was originally practiced by the Māori people of New Zealand (the word poi means "ball" in Māori). Women and men used it to increase flexibility, strength, and coordination. It developed into a traditional performance art practiced mostly by women. This art, in conjunction with others including waiata a ringa, haka and titi torea, make up the performance of kapa haka (Māori culture groups).





See also

Notes

  1. The evocative term 'Impartial Art' cleverly associates juggling arts with Martial Arts and in poignant point-counterpoint contrasts the inherently non-violent aspect of jugging disciplines.

References

  • Finnigan, Dave (1992). The Zen of Juggling. Human Kinetics Europe Ltd. ISBN-10: 0961552158 & ISBN-13: 978-0961552152

External links

bg:Пой cs:Poi da:Poi de:Poi fr:Poi he:פוי nl:Poi (jongleren) ja:ポイ (ジャグリング) nn:Poi pl:Poi ru:Пои sk:Poi (žonglovanie) sv:Poi