During the First World War, ideas of duty and sacrifice were a dominant characteristic of public discourse in New Zealand. Specifically, concern centred on a perceived inequality of sacrifice, which saw brave soldiers die on the front lines, whilst other men remained on the home front, apparently avoiding duty. This thesis charts the prevailing and powerful ideas that circulated during wartime New Zealand around these two stereotypes; on the one hand there was the soldier, the ideal of service and duty; on the other, the conscientious objector, a target for the derogatory label of 'shirker'. While there are a few select critical works which examine the experiences of New Zealand World War One conscientious objectors, such We Will Not Cease ...
New Zealanders served in large numbers in three campaigns during the Great War of 1914-1918. Much ha...
A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of the University of LutonThe object of th...
During World War Two more than 9,000 New Zealand servicemen were captured and imprisoned. Many of th...
During the First World War, New Zealand society was dominated by messages stressing the paramount im...
This thesis presents a sustained analysis of New Zealand World War I troopship magazines, as a disti...
Copyright holders of copyrighted images may request their removal via the Copyright Take Down Reques...
The approximately 18,000 imperial troops who arrived in New Zealand with the British regiments betwe...
It is over a century since World War One impacted on the lives of those who taught at or attended b...
The limited scholarship concerning New Zealand’s military forces in the decades before the First Wor...
This thesis is a study of soldier land settlement in New Zealand after World War I. Entrenched in Ne...
A more detailed general account of this thesis appears in the Introduction, where the themes to be d...
At the beginning of 1917, the prospect of extending conscription to Second Division men (men who wer...
The prevalent egalitarianism, mateship and hierarchy in the New Zealand army and as expressed in th...
The British Second World War conscientious objector is an oft forgotten figure, overshadowed in both...
In this thesis I propose to examine the role and structure of the New Zealand Volunteer Force betwee...
New Zealanders served in large numbers in three campaigns during the Great War of 1914-1918. Much ha...
A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of the University of LutonThe object of th...
During World War Two more than 9,000 New Zealand servicemen were captured and imprisoned. Many of th...
During the First World War, New Zealand society was dominated by messages stressing the paramount im...
This thesis presents a sustained analysis of New Zealand World War I troopship magazines, as a disti...
Copyright holders of copyrighted images may request their removal via the Copyright Take Down Reques...
The approximately 18,000 imperial troops who arrived in New Zealand with the British regiments betwe...
It is over a century since World War One impacted on the lives of those who taught at or attended b...
The limited scholarship concerning New Zealand’s military forces in the decades before the First Wor...
This thesis is a study of soldier land settlement in New Zealand after World War I. Entrenched in Ne...
A more detailed general account of this thesis appears in the Introduction, where the themes to be d...
At the beginning of 1917, the prospect of extending conscription to Second Division men (men who wer...
The prevalent egalitarianism, mateship and hierarchy in the New Zealand army and as expressed in th...
The British Second World War conscientious objector is an oft forgotten figure, overshadowed in both...
In this thesis I propose to examine the role and structure of the New Zealand Volunteer Force betwee...
New Zealanders served in large numbers in three campaigns during the Great War of 1914-1918. Much ha...
A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of the University of LutonThe object of th...
During World War Two more than 9,000 New Zealand servicemen were captured and imprisoned. Many of th...