This article positions Maori author Alan Duff in relation to the New Right free market economy which emerged in New Zealand in the late 1980s. It argues that Duff’s ambivalent images of contemporary Maori in his novel Once Were Warriors (1990), its sequel What Becomes of the Broken-Hearted (1996), and his autobiography, Out of the Mist and Steam (1999), ignore postcolonial discourses, clash with values of Maori Renaissance writing, and bypass biculturalism. Duff’s unrepresentative neo-colonialism and his hybrid Maori-Pakeha identity become the ‘brown man’s burden’ rather than the white man, as earlier liberal Pakeha celebrations of the Maori such as Roderick Findlayson’s stories in The Brown Man’s Burden (1938) had acknowledged. ...
This article discusses the intellectual legacy of David P. Ausubel in Aotearoa-New Zealand. Some for...
This article investigates the interrelationship of settler identity and white masculinity in the wor...
This article examines four novels written since 1980 by two Aboriginal Australian authors and two Ma...
This article reads Maori writer Alan Duff's fiction as enacting strategies responding to difficult s...
In a recent article on the political and economic crisis in New Zealand, Bob Jesson has argued that ...
Alan Duff’s bestselling novel Once Were Warriors (1990) raised bitter controversies for its harsh de...
Alan Duff's novel Once Were Warriors is the first work of fiction to be published in the Talanoa: Co...
Alan Duff’s bestselling novel Once Were Warriors (1990) raised bitter controversies for its harsh de...
International audienceAn exercise in symptomatic reading, this paper studies Alan Duff’s Once Were W...
Article review: In this compulsively readable article, Otto Heim analyses the reasons for the creati...
An exercise in symptomatic reading, this paper studies Alan Duff’s Once Were Warriors (1990) from a ...
This paper refers to changing race relations in Aotearoa/New Zealand over the last thirty years, foc...
John Mulgan's Man Alone (1939), Keri Hulme's the bone people (1983) and Alan Duffs Once Were Warrio...
The Maori literary renaissance was period of intense literary and cultural activity that coincided w...
This article examines four novels written since 1980 by two Aboriginal Australian authors and two Ma...
This article discusses the intellectual legacy of David P. Ausubel in Aotearoa-New Zealand. Some for...
This article investigates the interrelationship of settler identity and white masculinity in the wor...
This article examines four novels written since 1980 by two Aboriginal Australian authors and two Ma...
This article reads Maori writer Alan Duff's fiction as enacting strategies responding to difficult s...
In a recent article on the political and economic crisis in New Zealand, Bob Jesson has argued that ...
Alan Duff’s bestselling novel Once Were Warriors (1990) raised bitter controversies for its harsh de...
Alan Duff's novel Once Were Warriors is the first work of fiction to be published in the Talanoa: Co...
Alan Duff’s bestselling novel Once Were Warriors (1990) raised bitter controversies for its harsh de...
International audienceAn exercise in symptomatic reading, this paper studies Alan Duff’s Once Were W...
Article review: In this compulsively readable article, Otto Heim analyses the reasons for the creati...
An exercise in symptomatic reading, this paper studies Alan Duff’s Once Were Warriors (1990) from a ...
This paper refers to changing race relations in Aotearoa/New Zealand over the last thirty years, foc...
John Mulgan's Man Alone (1939), Keri Hulme's the bone people (1983) and Alan Duffs Once Were Warrio...
The Maori literary renaissance was period of intense literary and cultural activity that coincided w...
This article examines four novels written since 1980 by two Aboriginal Australian authors and two Ma...
This article discusses the intellectual legacy of David P. Ausubel in Aotearoa-New Zealand. Some for...
This article investigates the interrelationship of settler identity and white masculinity in the wor...
This article examines four novels written since 1980 by two Aboriginal Australian authors and two Ma...