Bibliography_of_New_Zealand_history

Bibliography of New Zealand history

Bibliography of New Zealand history

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This is a bibliography of selected works on the history of New Zealand.

New Zealand

General or overview works

  • Belich, James (1996). Making Peoples: a history of the New Zealanders, from Polynesian settlement to the end of the nineteenth century. A History of the New Zealanders. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN 978-0824825171.
  • Belich, James (2001). Paradise Reforged: a history of the New Zealanders from the 1880s to the year 2000. A History of the New Zealanders. Auckland: Allen Lane. ISBN 9780713991727.
  • Byrnes, Giselle, ed. (2009). The New Oxford History of New Zealand. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-558471-4.
  • King, Michael (2003). The Penguin History of New Zealand. Auckland: Penguin Group (NZ). ISBN 978-1-7422-8826-0.
  • Mein Smith, Philippa (2012). A Concise History of New Zealand (Second ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139196574.
  • Sinclair, Keith, ed. (1997). The Oxford Illustrated History of New Zealand (2nd ed.). Auckland: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195583816.
  • Sinclair, Keith (1988). A History of New Zealand (Rev. ed.). Auckland: Penguin. ISBN 9780140228212.
  • Walker, Ranginui (2004). Ka Whawhai Tonu Matou = Struggle Without End. Auckland: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780143019459.

Arts and literature

  • Tony Ballantyne, "Placing Literary Culture: Books and Civic Culture in Milton" in Journal of New Zealand Literature (2010)
  • Beavan, Peter, and John Stacpoole. New Zealand Art and Architecture, 1820–1970 (1973)
  • David Eggleton. Towards Aotearoa: A Short History of 20th Century New Zealand Art (2007)
  • Evans, Patrick. The Penguin History of New Zealand Literature (Auckland: Penguin, 1990)
  • Feeney, Warren. "The Establishment of the Canterbury Society of Arts: Forming the Taste, Judgement and Identity of a Province, 1850–1880," New Zealand Journal of History (2010) 44#2 pp 174–189. Explores the influence of British art, the links of the CSA to the Royal Academy in London, the role of Enlightenment ideals of liberalism and individualism, how imperial nationmalism influence art and helped form a New Zealand identity, and establishment of the Canterbury College School of Art.
  • McCormick, E. H. Letters and art in New Zealand (1940)
  • Murray, Stuart. Never a Soul at Home: New Zealand Literary Nationalism and the 1930s (Wellington: Victoria University Press, 1998)
  • Pound, Francis. The Invention of New Zealand: Art and National Identity, 1930–1970 (2009)
  • Robinson, Roger, and Nelson Wattie, eds. The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Literature (Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998)
  • Sturm, Terry, ed. The Oxford History of New Zealand Literature in English (Auckland: Oxford University Press, 1991)
  • Williams, Mark, and Michele Leggott, eds. Opening the Book: New Essays on New Zealand Writing (Auckland University Press, 1995)

Economics

  • Banner, Stuart. "Conquest by Contract: Wealth Transfer and Land Market Structure in Colonial New Zealand," Law & Society Review (2000) 34#1 pp. 47–96 in JSTOR
  • Belshaw, H. "Dairying Industry of New Zealand," Economic Geography (1927) 3#3 pp. 281–296 in JSTOR
  • Belshaw, H. "Crisis and Readjustment in New Zealand," Journal of Political Economy (1933) 41#6 pp. 750–775 in JSTOR, covers economic impact of the Great Depression
  • Buchanan, R. Ogilvie. "Sheep Rearing in New Zealand," Economic Geography (1931) 7#4 pp. 365–379 in JSTOR
  • Condliffe, J. B. New Zealand in the Making: A Study of Economic and Social Development (2nd ed. 1959) online, an influential survey
  • Hawke, Gary R. The Making of New Zealand: An Economic History (1985) excerpt and text search, a standard textbook
  • Hawke, Gary R., and Richard W. Baker. Anzus Economics: Economic Trends and Relations among Australia, New Zealand, and the United States (Praeger Publishers, 1992)
  • Hawke, G. R. "The Government and the Depression of the 1930s in New Zealand: An Essay Towards a Revision," Australian Economic History Review (1973) 13#1, pp 72–95
  • Hunter, Ian and Marie Wilson. "Origins and Opportunity: 150 Years of New Zealand Entrepreneurship," Journal of Management and Organization (2007) 13#4
  • Le Rossignol, James Edward, and William Downie Stewart. "Railways in New Zealand," Quarterly Journal of Economics (1909) 23#4 pp. 652–696 in JSTOR, free
  • Lloyd-Prichard, Muriel Florence. An economic history of New Zealand to 1939 (1970)
  • McLauchlan, Gordon. The Farming of New Zealand: The People and the Land (2006)
  • Riseborough, Hazel. Shear Hard Work: A History of New Zealand Shearing (2009)
  • Stewart, William Downie. "Land Tenure and Land Monopoly in New Zealand: I," Journal of Political Economy (1909) 17#2 pp. 82–91, 144–52 in JSTOR

Environment and geography

  • Brooking, Tom, and Eric Pawson. Seeds of Empire: The Environmental Transformation of New Zealand (2010)
  • Brooking, Tom, and Eric Pawson. Environmental Histories of New Zealand (2002)
  • Dunlap, Thomas R. Nature and the English Diaspora: Environment and History in the United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand (1999)
  • Grey, Alan H. Aotearoa & New Zealand: A Historical Geography (Canterbury University Press 1994)
  • Hamer D.A. "Towns in Nineteenth-Century New Zealand," New Zealand Journal of History (1979) 13#1 pp 5–24.
  • Hamer, David. "The making of urban New Zealand," Journal of Urban History (1995) 22#1 pp 6–39
  • McKinnon, Malcolm. Bateman New Zealand historical atlas (1997)

Foreign affairs and wars

  • Belich, James. The New Zealand Wars and the Victorian Interpretation of Racial Conflict (1989)
  • Buchanan, Paul G. "Lilliputian in Fluid Times: New Zealand Foreign Policy after the Cold War," Political Science Quarterly (2010) 125#2 pp 255–279
  • Hensley, Gerald, Beyond the Battlefield: New Zealand and its Allies, 1939–45 (2009) 415pp., diplomatic history
  • McGibbon, Ian, and Paul Goldstone. The Oxford Companion to New Zealand Military History (2001)
  • McKinnon, Malcolm. Independence and Foreign Policy: New Zealand in the World since 1935 (Auckland University Press 1993)

Government and reform

  • Coleman, Peter J. "The Spirit of New Zealand Liberalism in the Nineteenth Century," Journal of Modern History (1958) 30#3 pp. 227–235 in JSTOR
  • Coleman, Peter J. "New Zealand Liberalism and the Origins of the American Welfare State," Journal of American History (1982) 69#2 pp. 372–391 in JSTOR
  • Coleman, Peter J. Progressivism and the World of Reform: New Zealand and the Origins of the American Welfare State (1987)
  • Davidson, Alexander. Two Models of Welfare: The Origins and Development of the Welfare State in Sweden and New Zealand, 1888–1988 (1989)
  • Fischer, David Hackett. Fairness and Freedom: A History of Two Open Societies: New Zealand and the United States (2012) a search for fairness infuses N.Z. politics, compared to freedom in the US excerpt and text search
  • Grimshaw, Patricia. Women's Suffrage in New Zealand (1988), the standard scholarly study
  • Grimshaw, Patricia. "Women's Suffrage in New Zealand Revisited: Writing from the Margins," Caroline Daley, and Melanie Nolan, eds. Suffrage and Beyond: International Feminist Perspectives (New York U.P., 1994) pp 25–41.

Labour

  • Martin, John E. Holding the Balance. A History of New Zealand's Department of Labour 1891–1995 (1997)
  • Nolan, Melanie. "Classic Third Way or Before its Time? The New Zealand Labour Party in Local and Transnational Context," Labour History Review (2010) 75#1 pp 98–113.
  • Olssen, Erik. The Red Feds: Revolutionary Industrial Unionism and the New Zealand Federation of Labour 1908–1914 (1988)

Māori

  • Davidson, Janet M. The Prehistory of New Zealand (1987)
  • Hill, Richard S. Maori and the State: Crown-Maori Relations in New Zealand/Aotearoa, 1950–2000 (2010)
  • Iho, Taonga Tuku. Encyclopedia of Maori Culture (2002)
  • Pool, D. Ian. "Post-War Trends in Maori Population Growth," Population Studies (1967) 21#2 pp. 87–98 in JSTOR
  • Pool, D. Ian. Maori Population of New Zealand, 1769–1971(1989)
  • Williams, Adrian. Politics of the New Zealand Maori: Protest and co-operation, 1891–1909 (1969)

Political history

Social history

  • Fairburn, Miles. The Ideal Society and Its Enemies: The Foundations of Modern New Zealand Society, 1850–1900 (1989)
  • Ryan, Greg. "Drink and the Historians: Sober Reflections on Alcohol in New Zealand 1840–1914," New Zealand Journal of History (2010) 44#1 pp 35–53. Examines drinking patterns, why men drank, whether drinking was excessive compared to other countries, how drinking behaviour evolved, and the social role of brewers and the pub owners.
  • Ryan, Greg. The Making of New Zealand Cricket: 1832–1914 (2004) excerpt and text search

Religion and society

  • Else, Anne, ed. Women Together A History of Women's Organizations in New Zealand (Wellington: Daphne Brasell, 1993)
  • Morrison, Hugh. "Globally and Locally Positioned: New Zealand Perspectives on the Current Practice of Religious History," Journal of Religious History (2011) 35#2 pp 181–198; historiography
  • Morrison, Hugh. "The 'joy and heroism of doing good': The New Zealand Missionary" Record and Late-Nineteenth-Century Protestant Children's Missionary Support," Journal of New Zealand Literature: JNZL (2010) No. 28, Part 2: Special Issue: Cultures of Print in Colonial New Zealand pp. 158–182
  • Stenhouse, John. "Christianity, Modernity and Culture: New Perspectives On New Zealand History"
  • Tennant, Margaret. The Fabric of Welfare: Voluntary Organisations, Government and Welfare in New Zealand, 1840–2005 (2007)

Settlement, migration, demography

  • Adams, Peter. Fatal Necessity: British Intervention in New Zealand, 1830–47 (1978)
  • Akenson, Donald Harman. Half the World from Home: Perspectives on the Irish in New Zealand, 1860–1950 (Wellington, 1990)
  • Arnold, Rollo. The farthest promised land: English villagers, New Zealand immigrants of the 1870s (1981)
  • Borrie W. D. Immigration to New Zealand: 1854–1938 (Canberra: Australian National University, 1991)
  • Bueltmann, Tanja. "'No Colonists are more Imbued with their National Sympathies than Scotchmen,'" New Zealand Journal of History (2009) 43#2 pp 169–181. Covering the period from 1841 to 1930, the article examines the many Caledonian societies. They organised sports teams to entice the young and preserved an idealised Scottish national myth (based on Robert Burns) for the elderly. They gave Scots a path to assimilation and cultural integration as Scottish New Zealanders.
  • Byrnes, Giselle. "Nation and Migration: Postcolonial Perspectives," New Zealand Journal of History (2009) 43#2 pp 123–132.
  • Coleman, Peter J. "The New Zealand Frontier and the Turner Thesis," Pacific Historical Review (1958) 27#3 pp. 221–237 in JSTOR
  • Fraser, Lyndon, ed. A Distant Shore: Irish Migration and New Zealand Settlement (Dunedin, 2000)
  • Gandar, J.M. "New Zealand Net Migration in the Latter Part of the Nineteenth Century," Australian Economic History Review (1979) 19:151-68
  • Neville, R. J. Warwick and C.James O'Neill, eds. Population of New Zealand: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (1979)
  • Pool, Ian, Arunachalam Dharmalingam, and Janet Sceats. The New Zealand Family since 1840: A Demographic History (Auckland University Press, 2007). 474 pp.

World wars

First World War

  • Baker, Paul, King and Country Call: New Zealanders, Conscription and the Great War (1988)
  • Boyack, Nicholas. Behind the lines: The lives of New Zealand soldiers in the First World War (1989)
  • Condliffe, J. B. "New Zealand during the War," Economic Journal (1919) 29#114 pp. 167–185 in JSTOR, free, economic mobilisation
  • Crawford, John, and Ian McGibbon, eds. New Zealand's Great War: New Zealand, the Allies and the First World War (2008)
  • Parsons, Gwen. "The New Zealand Home Front during World War One and World War Two." History Compass 11.6 (2013): 419-428.
  • Pugsley, Christopher. The ANZAC experience: New Zealand, Australia and Empire in the First World War (2004)

Second World War

  • Baker, J. V. T. War Economy (1965) NZ official history
  • Montgomerie, Deborah. The Women's War: New Zealand Women 1939–45 (2001) argues that the Second World War was not a major turning point in the status of women
  • Parsons, Gwen. "The New Zealand Home Front during World War One and World War Two," History Compass (2013) 11#6 pp 419–428, online
  • Taylor, Nancy M. The Home Front Volume I NZ official history (1986); Volume II
  • Whitfeld, Frederick Lloyd. Political and External Affairs (1958) NZ official history
  • Hall, D. O. W. "Women at War," in Episodes & Studies Volume 1 (Historical Publications Branch, Wellington, New Zealand, 1948) pp 1–33 online

Historiography

  • Austrin, Terry, and John Farnsworth. "Assembling Histories: J. G. A. Pocock, Aotearoa/New Zealand and the British World," History Compass (Sep 2009), 7#5 pp 1286–1302
  • Tony Ballantyne, "Culture and Colonization: Revisiting the Place of Writing in Colonial New Zealand" in The Journal of New Zealand Studies (2009) This essay offers an overview of recent historical writing on colonialism.
  • Tony Ballantyne, On Place, Space and Mobility in Nineteenth Century New Zealand in The New Zealand Journal of History (2011)" This examines national history and its limits.
  • Hunter, Philippa. "Disturbing History's Identity in the New Zealand Curriculum to Free Up Historical Thinking," Curriculum Matters (2011) Vol. 7 online[dead link]
  • Pickles, Katie. "The Obvious and the Awkward: Postcolonialism and the British World," New Zealand Journal of History (2011) 45#1 pp 85–101; looks at metropole and colony
  • Pollock, Jacob. "Cultural Colonization and Textual Biculturalism," New Zealand Journal of History (2007) 41#2 pp 180–198. Compares the approaches in James Belich's Making Peoples: A History of the New Zealanders. From Polynesian Settlement to the End of the Nineteenth Century (1996) and Paradise Reforged: A History of the New Zealanders. From the 1880s to the Year 2000 (2001) with those of Michael King's The Penguin History of New Zealand (2003). Responding to Maori arguments that the colonial narrative of Pakeha history was a device to privilege the legitimacy of British colonisation, Belich wrote a radically bicultural story. He says the two peoples—both immigrants—developed their mother cultures inside New Zealand. King takes a more traditional approach that portrays a new unified state in which there are not two distinct and equal cultures but two principal varieties of New Zealanders.
  • Tony Ballantyne, 'Culture and Colonization: Revisiting the Place of Writing in Colonial New Zealand' in The Journal of New Zealand Studies (2009). This essay offers an overview of recent historical writing on colonialism.

Online reference works

Primary sources and oral histories

  • New Zealand Official Yearbook annual 1893–2008
  • Fraser, Lyndon, and Katie Pickles, eds. Shifting Centres: Women and Migration in New Zealand History (U. of Otago Press, 2002), 224pp; personal accounts, mostly after 1945
  • McIntyre, W. David and W. J. Gardner, eds. Speeches and Documents on New Zealand History (1971), 489pp
  • Parr, Alison. Home: Civilian New Zealanders Remember the Second World War (2010)
  • Simpson, Tony, ed. The Sugarbag Years: An Oral History of the 1930s Depression in New Zealand (2009)

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