Te Tiriti/the Treaty of Waitangi and co-governance: where are we now?

It is only in the past fifty years that historians have researched the Tiriti/Treaty and realised how important it is as the foundation and agreement of our unique nation. A framework is now in place to acknowledge this. Recent research provides a better understanding of the Tiriti/Treaty and its basis for our relationship as a nation.

Devonport Library Associates invites you to hear Dame Claudia Orange in discussion with Kaumatua Danny Watson on this significant issue.

Devonport Library, Tuesday 25th July, 2023. Koha appreciated

Drinks and nibbles: 7pm, 7.30pm start

The State of the Media in a Fake News World

The State of the Media in a Fake News World

Devonport Library, Tuesday 24th August 2021.

Do you despair when you watch the TV news?

Do you find yourself shouting back at the radio?

Are you appalled by what you see on social media?

The media is in a state of flux. Technology and social media have changed the way the media works, undermined revenue streams and upended traditional ownership. The old model no longer works but we can’t be sure what the new model will be. New Zealand’s media scene went through a huge shake up last year, the culmination of years of business decline combined with the brutal impact of the Covid pandemic. It’s a tough time for journalists and the media.

But are there bright spots on the horizon?

We’ve lined up some of Auckland’s brightest journalism talent to be in conversation with Karren Beanland, sharing views on the state of the media and the future of the news industry.

Carol Hirschfeld – Well-known journalist, broadcaster, producer and documentary maker, Carol is Head of Video/Audio & Content for Stuff.  With a stable of more than 40 metropolitan and community newspapers as well as its eponymous website, Stuff was bought by its Chief Executive from Australia’s Fairfax Media last year for the sum of $1.

Rob Drent – Managing Editor of the must-read local newspaper the Devonport Flagstaff, Rob has been at the helm since 1997 and won numerous community news awards.  Before that he worked in New Zealand and England on community, daily and Sunday newspapers, and magazines.

Anna Thomas – Freelance journalist, RNZ newsreader and host, and media advisor, Anna is remembered for working on consumer affairs programme Fair Go for eight years both as a presenter and reporter. She has had many roles, producing, directing and writing television documentaries, and working with Tourism NZ, NZ Film Commission among others.

David Slack – Author, speechwriter, blogger, radio and television commentator, former columnist for the Sunday Star Times and former radio talkback host, has reinvented himself (again) with a newsletter on the subscription platform Substack.

Devonport Library, Tuesday 24th August 2021.

7pm drinks and nibbles, 7.30pm event start time. Koha appreciated

What you made of it.

From Los Angeles to Liguria, Croatia and Crete to Caracas and Colombia, as New Zealand poet laureate and Kohi swimmer, C.K. Stead’s third volume of his memoirs, “What you made of it.” takes us deep inside the mind and experience of one of our major authors of poetry, fiction and criticism.

Join C.K. Stead and Kevin Ireland in conversation at Devonport Library, Tuesday 27th July 2021,

7pm drinks and nibbles, 7.30pm event commences. Koha appreciated.

Books will be available on the night to purchase.

What history should we teach our 5 to 15 year olds?

Devonport Library, Tuesday 29th June 2021, 7pm.

A lively discussion involving Danny Watson, a local kaumatua, and teacher Graeme Ball, Chair, N.Z. History Teachers’ Association.

7pm drinks and nibbles, 7.30pm event starts. Koha appreciated.

 

The Future of Travel

 

The next Devonport Library Associates event will be at Devonport Library on Tuesday 25th May 2021. The doors open 7pm, the event starts 7.30pm.

A panel discussion on  the future of travel in these changing and uncertain times. The panel members are Andy Thompson, Director of Devonport House of Travel, and Peter Dragicevich, Lonely Planet writer and freelance newspaper contributor.

Falls The Shadow

 

 

On Tuesday 20 April we will be presenting a special DLA event in the lead-up to Anzac Day. The Victoria theatre in Devonport will be the venue for the showing of 5 short films to honour the commemoration art and memorial works of 4 Devonport people.

The main event kicks off at 7.00pm. Admission will be by koha -we will on this occasion be very reliant on your generosity.

This premier filmed event promises to be an outstanding look at the WW1 commemorative works of four Devonport artists: Helen Pollock, Tony McNeight, Michael Pritchard, and Chris Mullane.

The big screen at the Vic will make the most of the quality of the footage.

Come, get a drink and a nibble, and grab a seat.

Subscription forms will be available for new members.

 

Poetry New Zealand Yearbook 2020

Devonport Library Associates and Massey University Press invite you to the launch of Poetry New Zealand Yearbook 2020, Edited by Johanna Emeney.
This is an annual, lively event honouring and featuring readings from a number of our published poets.
Launched by Kevin Ireland, with readings by featured poet essa may ranapiri and Anne Kennedy, Bob Orr, C.K. Stead, Jack Ross, Elizabeth Morton and Tracey Slaughter.

Tuesday 10 March 2020, 7pm
Devonport Library, 2 Victoria Road, Devonport.
Books will be for sale at the event thanks to Paradox Books.

Book launch and panel discussion

 

 

On Tuesday August 27, 2019 the Auckland launch of Elspeth Sandys’ new book “A communist in the Family; Searching for Rewi Alley” will be held at Devonport Library. This will be followed by a panel discussion on China.

The panel:

Elspeth Sandys – author.

John McKinnon – former New Zealand Ambassador to China.

George Andrews – NZ China Friendship Society.

Geoff Chapple – Rewi Alley biographer.

7pm drinks and nibbles, 7.30pm event starts.

Dear Oliver

 

Devonport Library  Tuesday 31st July 2018, 7.00 – 9.00pm

Book Launch
Dear Oliver: Uncovering a Pākehā history By Peter Wells

Letters are time capsules, portals to other times and places. Rarely written in today’s world of instant communication, letters record domestic dramas and reflect great historical moments.

When esteemed writer, film director and historian Peter Wells discovered a cache of family letters amongst his elderly mother’s effects, he found the means to retrace his family history.

Colourful and intriguing, Dear Oliver is tender, poignant, engaging and revealing, the work of one of this country’s finest writers.

Drinks and nibbles: 7 – 7.30pm.
Author talk 7.30 – 8.30pm