The Shaping of History 2001
DOI: 10.7810/9781877242175_22
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Myth, Race, and Identity in New Zealand

Abstract: THIS ESSAY explores aspects of the collective identity of two peoples, Maori and Pakeha, the neo-Polynesians and neo-British of New Zealand. 1 It deals in the interactions of myth and history, of race, tribe, and nation, of Europe and the Pacific, and of Us and Them. It does so in the conviction that New Zealand, an intersection between two cultures exceptionally prone to spawning reproductions of themselves, is a good place to study such matters. The paper is an exercise in the social history of ideas, as aga… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…The importance of cultural heritage as a singular entity to distinguish a people and make them unique from other groups has been stressed by writers from a variety of disciplines (banks-Wallace 2002, belich 2003, lentz 2000, Poll 2010). Examples of cultural heritage resources include tangible objects such as monuments, archaeological sites, paintings, sculpture, manuscripts, natural landscapes and geographical formations, war memorials, underwater ruins, cities, shipwrecks, and texts, just to mention STAKEhOldErS' ATTiTudES TOWArdS ThE mANAGEmENT ANd PrESErVATiON OF diGiTAl CulTurAl hEriTAGE rESOurCES iN GhANA Volume 43 Number 4 Eric Boamah, Daniel G. Dorner, Gillian Oliver a few.…”
Section: Introduction and Background To The Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The importance of cultural heritage as a singular entity to distinguish a people and make them unique from other groups has been stressed by writers from a variety of disciplines (banks-Wallace 2002, belich 2003, lentz 2000, Poll 2010). Examples of cultural heritage resources include tangible objects such as monuments, archaeological sites, paintings, sculpture, manuscripts, natural landscapes and geographical formations, war memorials, underwater ruins, cities, shipwrecks, and texts, just to mention STAKEhOldErS' ATTiTudES TOWArdS ThE mANAGEmENT ANd PrESErVATiON OF diGiTAl CulTurAl hEriTAGE rESOurCES iN GhANA Volume 43 Number 4 Eric Boamah, Daniel G. Dorner, Gillian Oliver a few.…”
Section: Introduction and Background To The Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, Rousseau believed that the Indigenous peoples of the Pacific held a moral superiority (Hokowhitu, 2001) that contrasted with the industrialised world's immorality (Smith, 2021). From this perspective, Māori were seen to be 'better blacks' than others since they were considered 'easier' to civilise (Belich, 2001).…”
Section: Māori As Bewildered-childlike Othermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…40These government policies were later known as “assimilation,” then “integration.” Ward, Racial “Amalgamation” in Nineteenth-Century New Zealand ; Harris, “Concurrent Narratives of Māori Integration,” 139–55; Belich, “Myth, Race and Identity,” 9–22.…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%