Review of: Observations: Studies in New Zealand documentary, by Russell Campbell. Wellington: Victoria University Press, 2011, 260 pp. ISBN 978-0864736567Russell CampbellL, author of Observations: Studies in New Zealand Documentary has been described as a ‘partisan reporter’, the book as a ‘series of dispatches from the front’. Aligning the author on a series of borders between intellectual and practical, the book has been divided into three appropriate sections; Workers and Stirrers, State of the Nation and Kiwi Culture that support the author’s commitment to the latter. Woven in, topics such as industrial unrest, feminist movements and Māori resurgence capture a sense of the contested versions of New Zealand depicted in these documentarie...
There is a very good and useful book waiting to escape from this collection on journalism and public...
Review of What's News? Reclaiming Journalism in New Zealand, edited by Judy McGregor and Margie Comr...
Review of: Politics and the Media, edited by Babak Bahador, Geoff Kemp, Kate McMillan and Chris Rudd...
Let us problematise and interrogate the word ‘ New ’. In 1974 Frank Crowley edited A New History of ...
Review of 'New Zealand Film: An illustrated history' for 'The journal of New Zealand art history 201...
A Moral Truth: 150 years of Investigative Journalism in New Zealand, edited by James Hollings. Auckl...
The Broken Estate: Journalism and Democracy in a Post-Truth World, by Mel Bunce. Wellington: Bridget...
Lasting Impressions: The Story of New Zealand’s Newspapers, 1840-1920, by Ian F. Grant. Masterton, N...
This article reviews the book: “Beyond the scene: Landscape and identity in Aotearoa New Zealand”, e...
Review of: Blood on their Banner: Nationalist Struggles in the South Pacific, by David Robie. London...
Voices from the New Zealand Wars. He Reo nō ngā pakanga o Aotearoa, by Vincent O’Malley. Wellington,...
Migrant and Diasporic Film and Filmmaking in New Zealand, edited by Arezou Zalipour. Singapore: Spri...
Listening to the People of the Land: Christianity, Colonisation & the Path to Redemption, edited...
Book review of: Peace, Power & Politics: How New Zealand Became Nuclear Free, by Maire Leadbeate...
Review of: Don’t Spoil My Beautiful Face: Media, Mayhem and Human Rights in the Pacific, by David Ro...
There is a very good and useful book waiting to escape from this collection on journalism and public...
Review of What's News? Reclaiming Journalism in New Zealand, edited by Judy McGregor and Margie Comr...
Review of: Politics and the Media, edited by Babak Bahador, Geoff Kemp, Kate McMillan and Chris Rudd...
Let us problematise and interrogate the word ‘ New ’. In 1974 Frank Crowley edited A New History of ...
Review of 'New Zealand Film: An illustrated history' for 'The journal of New Zealand art history 201...
A Moral Truth: 150 years of Investigative Journalism in New Zealand, edited by James Hollings. Auckl...
The Broken Estate: Journalism and Democracy in a Post-Truth World, by Mel Bunce. Wellington: Bridget...
Lasting Impressions: The Story of New Zealand’s Newspapers, 1840-1920, by Ian F. Grant. Masterton, N...
This article reviews the book: “Beyond the scene: Landscape and identity in Aotearoa New Zealand”, e...
Review of: Blood on their Banner: Nationalist Struggles in the South Pacific, by David Robie. London...
Voices from the New Zealand Wars. He Reo nō ngā pakanga o Aotearoa, by Vincent O’Malley. Wellington,...
Migrant and Diasporic Film and Filmmaking in New Zealand, edited by Arezou Zalipour. Singapore: Spri...
Listening to the People of the Land: Christianity, Colonisation & the Path to Redemption, edited...
Book review of: Peace, Power & Politics: How New Zealand Became Nuclear Free, by Maire Leadbeate...
Review of: Don’t Spoil My Beautiful Face: Media, Mayhem and Human Rights in the Pacific, by David Ro...
There is a very good and useful book waiting to escape from this collection on journalism and public...
Review of What's News? Reclaiming Journalism in New Zealand, edited by Judy McGregor and Margie Comr...
Review of: Politics and the Media, edited by Babak Bahador, Geoff Kemp, Kate McMillan and Chris Rudd...