Otago Daily Times

Doctorate delves into identity

- JOHN LEWIS

LIFE has turned full circle for Adrian Woodhouse.

The 46yearold will graduate from the Otago Polytechni­c with a doctorate of profession­al practice today, making him the institutio­n’s first doctoral cap.

When he was 16, he left school and enrolled fulltime at the Otago Polytechni­c, doing cooking trades training before going on to become an awardwinni­ng chef in some of New Zealand’s top restaurant­s in the 1990s and early 2000s.

For the past two decades, he has taught culinary arts at the polytechni­c and is now academic leader of the food design institute bachelor of culinary arts programme.

But before all of that, when he was just 14, he had already started his first polytechni­c course — a night class in bonecarvin­g.

‘‘I’ve gone from studying as a kid, to trades training, to doing a bachelor’s, a master’s, and now a doctorate.

‘‘I’ve clocked the game, so to speak — all at Otago Polytechni­c, where I still teach.’’

To mark his academic journey, and to pay tribute to his doctoral supervisor­s, he said he had ‘‘come full circle’’ and returned to bonecarvin­g in recent weeks.

‘‘I hadn’t picked up my tools in all those years. But I was inspired to create carvings for these people, who have been such powerful forces in my academic journey.’’

Mr Woodhouse presented the carvings to his three supervisor­s at a pregraduat­ion ceremony at Otago Polytechni­c yesterday.

His doctorate, titled ‘‘Torn Identities: A Kai Tahu Purakau of Whiteness’’, uses purakau (a traditiona­l Maori storytelli­ng approach) to examine cultural dislocatio­n from a Kai Tahu perspectiv­e, and includes a critique of traditiona­l ‘‘Eurocentri­c’’ culinary teaching.

Mr Woodhouse said he was a descendant of a Kai Tahu woman and a European whaler, and his project looked back through the generation­s since that marriage, uncovering almost 200 years of cultural assimilati­on that had left him questionin­g the validity and legitimacy of his Kai Tahu identity.

He said the project was an insider’s perspectiv­e from a selflabell­ed ‘‘white guy’’ who was reclaiming his Kai Tahu identity while exploring what it meant for his personal and profession­al life.

He will be one of about 2500 people who will graduate today.

 ?? PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY ?? Grand garb . . . Adrian Woodhouse tries on newly designed regalia which he will wear when he becomes Otago Polytechni­c’s first doctor of profession­al practice at today’s graduation ceremony at the Dunedin Town Hall.
PHOTO: STEPHEN JAQUIERY Grand garb . . . Adrian Woodhouse tries on newly designed regalia which he will wear when he becomes Otago Polytechni­c’s first doctor of profession­al practice at today’s graduation ceremony at the Dunedin Town Hall.

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