Louisa Baker was the first New Zealand woman to succeed in making a career out of writing novels, publishing seventeen books between 1894 and 1910. Significantly, this success was only possible when Baker left New Zealand to pursue her literary career in England, a departure that later authors, such as Jane Mander and Katherine Mansfield, were to follow
The paper discusses Mrs W. I. Thrower's novel Younah!: A Tasmanian Aboriginal Romance of the Catara...
Why look to fiction to take the temperature of a country? You might as well ask the canary to issue ...
This thesis examines changes in the relationship between romance and realism in the New Zealand shor...
Louisa Alice Baker was the first professional New Zealand woman novelist, publishing seventeen books...
Noeline Baker was an interesting and unusual woman whose life spanned one of the most dramatic phase...
A colonial rather than a New Zealand writer, Lady Barker nevertheless occupies a distinct place in n...
Set in 1912, The Passionate Puritan follows young teacher Sidney Carey to an isolated kauri-milling ...
Nelle Scanlan was the most popular New Zealand novelist of the 1930s and 1940s, particularly importa...
This article discusses the life and works of the New Zearland`s writer Katherine Mansfield, known fo...
The short story cycle played an important role in the early work of Katherine Mansfield. Her first p...
This thesis considers Katherine Mansfield’s development as a writer in relation to late nineteenth a...
‘I love this place more and more. One is conscious of it as I used to be conscious of New Zealand. I...
The secular character of New Zealand has become an accepted `facts of our time. Nevertheless, Christ...
This paper looks at how the new two volume edition of the Collected Works of Katherine Mansfield, ed...
Sylvia Ashton-Warner was one of New Zealand’s more colourful literary figures. Her insistence on liv...
The paper discusses Mrs W. I. Thrower's novel Younah!: A Tasmanian Aboriginal Romance of the Catara...
Why look to fiction to take the temperature of a country? You might as well ask the canary to issue ...
This thesis examines changes in the relationship between romance and realism in the New Zealand shor...
Louisa Alice Baker was the first professional New Zealand woman novelist, publishing seventeen books...
Noeline Baker was an interesting and unusual woman whose life spanned one of the most dramatic phase...
A colonial rather than a New Zealand writer, Lady Barker nevertheless occupies a distinct place in n...
Set in 1912, The Passionate Puritan follows young teacher Sidney Carey to an isolated kauri-milling ...
Nelle Scanlan was the most popular New Zealand novelist of the 1930s and 1940s, particularly importa...
This article discusses the life and works of the New Zearland`s writer Katherine Mansfield, known fo...
The short story cycle played an important role in the early work of Katherine Mansfield. Her first p...
This thesis considers Katherine Mansfield’s development as a writer in relation to late nineteenth a...
‘I love this place more and more. One is conscious of it as I used to be conscious of New Zealand. I...
The secular character of New Zealand has become an accepted `facts of our time. Nevertheless, Christ...
This paper looks at how the new two volume edition of the Collected Works of Katherine Mansfield, ed...
Sylvia Ashton-Warner was one of New Zealand’s more colourful literary figures. Her insistence on liv...
The paper discusses Mrs W. I. Thrower's novel Younah!: A Tasmanian Aboriginal Romance of the Catara...
Why look to fiction to take the temperature of a country? You might as well ask the canary to issue ...
This thesis examines changes in the relationship between romance and realism in the New Zealand shor...