Historical Journal
Title | Historical Journal PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 186 |
Release | 2003 |
Genre | New Zealand |
ISBN |
New Zealand 2003
Title | New Zealand 2003 PDF eBook |
Author | Christopher Rice |
Publisher | |
Pages | 442 |
Release | 2003 |
Genre | Travel |
ISBN | 9781841573045 |
New Zealand is one of the world's fastest growing destinations for travellers of all ages. This guide intends to provide a handy reference to fit into every backpack, covering both north and south islands, it features detailed city and town maps. It includes dozens of suggested routes for travelling by car, train and bus as well as looking at car hire, bus and rail pass information.
Independent Travellers New Zealand 2005
Title | Independent Travellers New Zealand 2005 PDF eBook |
Author | Christopher Rice |
Publisher | Thomas Cook |
Pages | 444 |
Release | 2004 |
Genre | Travel |
ISBN | 9781841574226 |
"Independent Travellers New Zealand" is an original and practical guide to traveling around this spectacular, faraway country on a budget. Revised annually, it is describes plenty of recommended routes to travel, cities and areas to visit, and offers budget options for accommodations, transportation, eating out, and sightseeing. The guide comes with its own tailored free mini weblinks CD.
Making Peoples
Title | Making Peoples PDF eBook |
Author | James Belich |
Publisher | University of Hawaii Press |
Pages | 508 |
Release | 2002-02-28 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780824825171 |
Now in paper This immensely readable book, full of drama and humor as well as scholarship, is a watershed in the writing of New Zealand history. In making many new assertions and challenging many historical myths, it seeks to reinterpret our approach to the past. Given New Zealand's small population, short history, and great isolation, the history of the archipelago has been saddled with a reputation for mundanity. According to James Belich, however, it is just these characteristics that make New Zealand "a historian's paradise: a laboratory whose isolation, size, and recency is an advantage, in which the grand themes of world history are often played out more rapidly, more separately, and therefore more discernably, than elsewhere." The first of two planned volumes, Making Peoples begins with the Polynesian settlement and its development into the Maori tribes in the eleventh century. It traces the great encounter between independent Maoridom and expanding Europe from 1642 to 1916, including the foundation of the Pakeha, the neo-Europeans of New Zealand, between the 1830s and the 1880s. It describes the forging of a neo-Polynesia and a neo-Britain and the traumatic interaction between them. The author carefully examines the myths and realities that drove the colonialization process and suggests a new "living" version of one of the most critical and controversial documents in New Zealand's history, the Treaty of Waitangi, frequently descibed as New Zealand's Magna Carta. The construction of peoples, Maori and Pakeha, is a recurring theme: the response of each to the great shift from extractive to sustainable economics; their relationship with their Hawaikis, or ancestors, with each other, and with myth. Essential reading for anyone interested in New Zealand history and in the history of new societies in general.
Paradise Reforged
Title | Paradise Reforged PDF eBook |
Author | James Belich |
Publisher | Penguin Random House New Zealand Limited |
Pages | 848 |
Release | 2002-05-22 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1742288235 |
This book is the eagerly awaited companion to Professor James Belich's acclaimed Making Peoples, published in New Zealand, Britain and the United States in 1996. Making Peoples was hailed as a turning point in the writing of New Zealand history.Paradise Reforged picks up where Making Peoples left off, taking the story of the New Zealanders from the 1880s to the end of the twentieth century. It begins with the search for 'Better Britain' and ends by analysing the modern Maori resurgence, the new Pakeha consciousness, and the implications of a reinterpreted past for New Zealand's future. Along the way the book deals with subjects ranging from sport and sex to childhood and popular culture.Critics hailed Making Peoples as 'brilliant' and 'the most ambitious book yet written on this country's past'. Paradise Reforged, its successor, adopts a similarly incisive, original sweep across the New Zealand historical landscape in confronting the myths of the past.
Grass Huts and Warehouses
Title | Grass Huts and Warehouses PDF eBook |
Author | Caroline Ralston |
Publisher | University of Queensland Press |
Pages | 386 |
Release | 2014-06-01 |
Genre | Political Science |
ISBN | 1921902329 |
A pioneering study of early trade and beach communities in the Pacific Islands and first published in 1977, this book provides historians with an ambitious survey of early European-Polynesian contact, an analysis of how early trade developed along with the beachcomber community, and a detailed reconstruction of development of the early Pacific port towns. Set mainly in the first half of the 19th century, continuing in some cases for a few decades more, the book covers five ports: Kororareka (now Russell, in New Zealand), Levuka (Fiji), Apia (Samoa), Papeete (Tahiti) and Honolulu (Hawai'i). The role of beachcombers, the earliest European inhabitants, as well as the later consuls or commercial agents, and the development of plantation economies is explored. The book is a tour de force, the first detailed comparative academic study of these early precolonial trading towns and their race relations. It argues that the predominantly egalitarian towns where Islanders, beachcombers, traders, and missionaries mixed were largely harmonious, but this was undermined by later arrivals and larger populations.
Independent Travellers New Zealand, 2000
Title | Independent Travellers New Zealand, 2000 PDF eBook |
Author | Christopher Rice |
Publisher | Thomas Cook |
Pages | 428 |
Release | 2000 |
Genre | Travel |
ISBN | 9780762706754 |