This article analyses nineteenth-century women's captivity narratives in the white settler colony New Zealand. It asks how white femininity and indigenous masculinity are represented and how these notions relate to representations of white masculinity and indigenous femininity. Moreover, the article examines the relationship between colonial gender identities and British bourgeois ideals of respectable gender images. By comparing the New Zealand case with the early modern North American narrative of Mary Rowlandson and the Australian Eliza Fraser stories, the author argues that New Zealand can be included in a transcolonial culture of captivity, as it shares a transcolonial repertoire of discursiverhetorics, strategies and anxieties
Listed in 2020 Dean's List of Exceptional ThesesHistorians are increasingly paying attention to the ...
Married men and breadwinning were mutually implicit in Pakeha narratives of masculinity in nineteent...
By 1850 British women had settled in the Red River colony, a British outpost in what became the prov...
Anxiety and fear were central to the condition of settler colonialism in 1860s New Zealand. The Land...
Settler migrants in the Victorian age, as key agents within the project of colonial expansion, inscr...
This thesis uses diaspora theory to analyse late-nineteenth-century texts written by women in New Ze...
The very general nature of eugenics allowed many diverse groups and individuals, that on the surface...
Whether white settler societies can be described principally as diasporas or migrations is open to d...
This embodied, storied research engages the project of decolonizing gender violation by examining ho...
From 1839 to 1873 New Zealand was characterised by ideological, religious, economic cultural and soc...
This thesis examines the depiction of the settler colonial family as a site of trauma from a female-...
Ph.D. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2011.Includes bibliographical references.The two primary goals o...
This chapter explores the complex implications of the concept of island and culture in the anthropo...
© 2016 Dr. Grace YeeThis thesis analyses settler Chinese women’s storytelling in Aotearoa New Zealan...
In “Representations of Girlhood Trauma in Aotearoa New Zealand Literature Written by Women”, I inves...
Listed in 2020 Dean's List of Exceptional ThesesHistorians are increasingly paying attention to the ...
Married men and breadwinning were mutually implicit in Pakeha narratives of masculinity in nineteent...
By 1850 British women had settled in the Red River colony, a British outpost in what became the prov...
Anxiety and fear were central to the condition of settler colonialism in 1860s New Zealand. The Land...
Settler migrants in the Victorian age, as key agents within the project of colonial expansion, inscr...
This thesis uses diaspora theory to analyse late-nineteenth-century texts written by women in New Ze...
The very general nature of eugenics allowed many diverse groups and individuals, that on the surface...
Whether white settler societies can be described principally as diasporas or migrations is open to d...
This embodied, storied research engages the project of decolonizing gender violation by examining ho...
From 1839 to 1873 New Zealand was characterised by ideological, religious, economic cultural and soc...
This thesis examines the depiction of the settler colonial family as a site of trauma from a female-...
Ph.D. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2011.Includes bibliographical references.The two primary goals o...
This chapter explores the complex implications of the concept of island and culture in the anthropo...
© 2016 Dr. Grace YeeThis thesis analyses settler Chinese women’s storytelling in Aotearoa New Zealan...
In “Representations of Girlhood Trauma in Aotearoa New Zealand Literature Written by Women”, I inves...
Listed in 2020 Dean's List of Exceptional ThesesHistorians are increasingly paying attention to the ...
Married men and breadwinning were mutually implicit in Pakeha narratives of masculinity in nineteent...
By 1850 British women had settled in the Red River colony, a British outpost in what became the prov...