Louisa Alice Baker was the first professional New Zealand woman novelist, publishing seventeen books between 1894 and 1913. Most of her fiction was set in the New Zealand she lived in from the ages of 7 to 38, but all of her novels were published in Britain and America where there was an appetite for colonial settings and where her preoccupation with marriage drew comparisons with Olive Schreiner and Sarah Grand. Her choice of the pseudonym “Alien” speaks of her sense of dislocation from her New Zealand home and points to a moral feminist message that challenged patriarchal hierarchies
Sylvia Ashton-Warner was one of New Zealand’s more colourful literary figures. Her insistence on liv...
The picture of the Victorian female that has been handed down to us is that of the Angel in the Hous...
Margaret Laurence orders the world around her through the telling of story, and she shows us, in The...
Louisa Alice Baker was the first professional New Zealand woman novelist, publishing seventeen books...
Louisa Baker was the first New Zealand woman to succeed in making a career out of writing novels, pu...
A colonial rather than a New Zealand writer, Lady Barker nevertheless occupies a distinct place in n...
Noeline Baker was an interesting and unusual woman whose life spanned one of the most dramatic phase...
Many women writers between 1840 and 1870 were producing a particular form of social or "social ...
Nelle Scanlan was the most popular New Zealand novelist of the 1930s and 1940s, particularly importa...
This note gives biographical background to the publication of Cambridge's short novel, The Perversit...
“It is to the old newspapers that we must go if we want to see the beginning of colonial fiction&nbs...
Louisa May Alcott, born in Germantown, Pennsylvania on November 29, 1832, was the second daughter of...
American fiction writer best known as the author of the girls’ novel Little Women (1868-1869). Alcot...
A comparison of the references to Tasmania in the fiction of 'Tasma' (Jessie Couvreur) and Mrs Humph...
This article discusses the life and works of the New Zearland`s writer Katherine Mansfield, known fo...
Sylvia Ashton-Warner was one of New Zealand’s more colourful literary figures. Her insistence on liv...
The picture of the Victorian female that has been handed down to us is that of the Angel in the Hous...
Margaret Laurence orders the world around her through the telling of story, and she shows us, in The...
Louisa Alice Baker was the first professional New Zealand woman novelist, publishing seventeen books...
Louisa Baker was the first New Zealand woman to succeed in making a career out of writing novels, pu...
A colonial rather than a New Zealand writer, Lady Barker nevertheless occupies a distinct place in n...
Noeline Baker was an interesting and unusual woman whose life spanned one of the most dramatic phase...
Many women writers between 1840 and 1870 were producing a particular form of social or "social ...
Nelle Scanlan was the most popular New Zealand novelist of the 1930s and 1940s, particularly importa...
This note gives biographical background to the publication of Cambridge's short novel, The Perversit...
“It is to the old newspapers that we must go if we want to see the beginning of colonial fiction&nbs...
Louisa May Alcott, born in Germantown, Pennsylvania on November 29, 1832, was the second daughter of...
American fiction writer best known as the author of the girls’ novel Little Women (1868-1869). Alcot...
A comparison of the references to Tasmania in the fiction of 'Tasma' (Jessie Couvreur) and Mrs Humph...
This article discusses the life and works of the New Zearland`s writer Katherine Mansfield, known fo...
Sylvia Ashton-Warner was one of New Zealand’s more colourful literary figures. Her insistence on liv...
The picture of the Victorian female that has been handed down to us is that of the Angel in the Hous...
Margaret Laurence orders the world around her through the telling of story, and she shows us, in The...