2011/12
Bridget Williams Books is an independent publisher focusing on New Zealand history, history, Maori experience, contemporary issues, and women’s studies. The present company is a culmination of three decades of publishing by Bridget Williams. In a distinguished list of titles, this publishing has contributed to critical scholarship in New Zealand, and deepened our understanding of what it is to inhabit these islands.
The BWB Publishing Trust supports the work of Bridget Williams Books. Trustees: Trustees: Charlotte Macdonald (chair), Margaret Calder,, Graeme Kennedy Calder Kennedy.. Settlor: Hugh Rennie.
Supporting BWB books:
We warmly acknowledge the
contribution made to BWB’ BWB’ss publishing by: the Alexander Turnbull Turnbull Library Endowment Trust, Creative New Zealand/Te Waka Toi, the Deane Endowment Trust, the G & N Trust, the Deaf Development Fund, the Maori Purposes Fund Board, the New Zealand Law - Tahu, and some Foundation, the Stout Trust, Te Runanga o Ngai generous anonymous donors. Deaf Aotearoa has also provided valuable assistance.
People at BWB and on the books: Alison Carew, John Huria, Tui MacDonald, Angela Radford, Philip Rainer, Sarah Rennie, Tom Rennie, John Schiff, Jo Scully, Scully, Megan Simpson, Ginny Sullivan, Leanne Tamaki, Geoff Walker, Jude Watson, Bridget Williams, Melissa William Williamss
Book design: Aneline, Neil Pardington at Base Two, Tina Delceg, Mission Hall Creative
Catalogue: Printed by Printlink, designed by Mission Hall Creative
All information on new titles is provisional. Numbers of pages and illustrations are given approximately. approximately. All prices listed are the recommended retail prices only onl y, include GST,, and are subject to change without notice. GST
For information on the illustrations, see page 23.
Judith Binney
Aroha Harris
Atholl Anderson
Allan Davidson
Nicola Wheen
Charlotte Macdonald
Vincent O’Sullivan
Janine Hayward
Cybèle Locke
Strong, Beautiful and Modern
RRP $49.99
256 pages
National Fitness in Australia, Britain, Canada and New Zealand, 1935–1960
ISBN 9781927131404 9781927131404
240 x 170 mm
Publication: November 2011
30 b/w illustrations
Charlotte Macdonald
History
In the late 1930s and early 1940s, a wave o state-sponsored ‘national ftness’ programmes swept Britain and its ormer colonies. Following revelations o the Nazi enthusiasm or government-backed sports and the organisation o mass m ass leisure, the programmes quickly oundered. They probably laid, however, the oundations or the twentieth century’s obsession with ftness – a key acet o modern lie. In this highly original account, Charlotte Macdonald shows how governments became convinced that they must encourage citizens to be healthier and more active, and how these eorts reinorced the cultural ties o the Empire. Empi re. Alongside these state-sponsored eorts was a growing emphasis rom business, the medical establishment and popular culture on the importance o having a better body. body. Strong, Beautiful and Modern explains the origins o the modern preoccupation with ‘the body’. And, at a time when government concern over public health issues such as obesity is once again on the rise, it oers valuable lessons as to why the frst national ftness drive was ultimately a ailure. Drawing on extensive research, and written in vivid, lively prose, Strong, Beautiful and Modern is an historical investigation into the way that people and their governments think about their health and well-being, and how those historical views have shaped our modern lie. Wellington. She has Charlotte Macdonald is Proessor o History at Victoria University o Wellington. strong interests in women’s history, history, both in New Zealand Zealan d and the wider British Empire, and in the history o sport. Her previous books include My include My Hand Will Write What My Heart Dictates (1996), and she co-edited The Book of New Zealand Women (1991).
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Mihaia The Prophet Rua Kenana and his Community at Maungapohatu
Judith Binney, Gillian Chaplin & Craig Wallace
RRP $49.99
256 pages
ISBN 9781927131305 9781927131305
265 x 195 mm
Publication: November Approx 200 b/w 2011 (second edition). First illustrations published by OUP in 1979. Histo Hi story ry/Ma /Ma¯ori
Rua Kenana was an extraordinary prophetic leader rom the Urewera. Resisting threats to expel the Tühoe people rom their ancestral lands, he established a remarkable community at Maungapohatu, identiying himsel as the ‘Míhaia’ or ‘Messiah’ or Túhoe. Judith Binney, Binney, Gillian Chaplin and Craig Wallace researched the history o the community in the 1970s, working frst with a collection o photographs that they took to the Urewera. Sharing these photographs with descendants o Rua and his ollowers, they ound that ‘strangers opened their hearts to us, and shared their stories’. This biographical account ocuses on a dramatic moment in Urewera history, history, one that incorporated a shocking episode in early twentieth-century New Zealand. The rich photographic record documents not only the police assault on the Maungapohatu community but also the lives o the people and Rua’s utopian vision. The prophet lived into the 1930s, a leader still working to support and sustain his ollowers. Described on publication as ‘an unparalleled record o a community through time’, this remarkable history has been in demand since frst publication by Oxord University Press in 1979. Judith Binney, dnzm , frsnz, was the author o many award-winning histories, including Redemption Songs: A Life of Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Turuki (1995) and Encircled Lands: Te Urewera 1820–1921 (2009). Her work will appear also in Tangata Whenua: W henua: An Illustrated History (orthcoming, 2012). Photographer Gillian Chaplin is a director o the Melbourne based Magian Design Studio, specialising speciali sing in exhibition design around a round the world. Ater graduating rom Auckland University Un iversity in languages and anthropology, anthropology, Craig Wallace has managed literacy and English language programmes in several countries.
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Long Journey to the Border
RRP $49.99
300 pages
A Life of John Mulgan
ISBN 9781927131329 9781927131329
240 x 170 mm
Vincent O’Sullivan
Publication: November 2011 20 b/w illustrations (second edition). First published by Penguin in 2003. Biography
Vincent O’Sullivan has written a book more powerful and more moving than anything in our Michael King, NZ Herald, biographical literature. literature. Herald, 2003 John Mulgan was part o a gited yet uneasy group o young New Zealanders who made their mark between the wars – men such as Ian Milner, James Bertram, Dan Davin and Georey Cox. An Oxord graduate, he worked as a s a publisher at Oxord University Press beore leaving or the ront in World War Two. Fascinated but sometimes troubled by his home country, country, Mulgan saw New Zealand as a place o challenge and austere demands, a land that produced men more practical Alone, he depicted it as a tough, oten heartless than cultivated. In his amous novel Man novel Man Alone, country, country, characterised by the solitary fgure who has come to symbolise the male New Zealand psyche. He wrote more warmly o the place and the people in his poignant Experience, published ater his death. memoir, Report on Experience, Mulgan was a glamorous fgure: handsome, gited and a nd good at anything he attempted. a ttempted. His last years were spent fghting in the Allied cause in Egypt and Greece, where he distinguished himsel. But there were darker threads, too, which culminated in his decision to take his own lie in Cairo, just ater the end o the war and aged only thirtythree. In this penetrating biography, biography, Vincent O’Sullivan draws on a large collection o personal papers, ofcial records and contemporary memoirs to paint a vivid portrait o a man who came to represent so much about his country and his time. Vincent O’Sullivan, dcnzm, is one o New Zealand’s leading writers, acclaimed or his poetry and short stories, along with the novels Let the River Stand and Believers to the h e is also highly regarded as a Bright Coast. Coast. Honoured by many awards and distinctions, he playwright and critic, and or his superb scholarship as co-editor o The Collected Letters of Katherine Manseld. Manseld. Until recently, Vincent O’Sullivan taught at Victoria University.
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A Controversial Churchman
RRP $49.99
300 pages
Essays on George Selwyn, Bishop of New Zealand and Licheld, and Sarah Selwyn
ISBN 9781877242519 9781877242519
240 x 170 mm
Publication: November 2011
50 b/w illustrations
Edited by Allan Davidson
Biography/History
New Zealand’s frst Anglican bishop, George Selwyn, was a towering fgure in the young colony. Denounced as a ‘turbulent priest’ or speaking out against Crown practices that dispossessed Máori, he brought a vigorous approach to episcopal leadership. His wie Sarah Selwyn supported all her husband’s activities, in a lie characterised as one o ‘hardship and anxiety’. She expressed independently her sense o outrage over the Waitara dispute. Selwyn promoted participatory church government, ounded the innovative Melanesian Melan esian Mission, and developed a distinctive style o colonial church architecture. More controversially, versially, he battled b attled with the Church Missionary Society, Society, and was caught up in the bitter maelstrom o settler and Máori politics. His personal links with colonial and ecclesiastical networks gave him access to the heart o empire. These essays oer new insights into Selwyn’s role in developing pan-Anglicanism, strengthening links between the Church o England and the Episcopal and Anglican Churches in North America, and his time as Bishop o Lichfeld (1868–78). His place in Treaty history, history, as a political commentator and a valuable source o historical inormation, inorm ation, is recognised. George Selwyn let a large imprint on New Zealand church and society. society. This collection both honours and critiques a controversial bishop. Allan Davidson taught church history or many years at St John’s College and the University o Auckland. He has published extensively on religious history in New Zealand and the South Pacifc, and edited Living Legacy: A History of the Anglican Diocese of Auckland (2011). Contributors: Sir Paul Reeves, Warren Limbrick, Janet Craword, John Stenhouse, Grant Phillipson, Jonathan Mane-Wheoki, Bruce Kaye, Rowan Strong, Terry Brown, Ken Booth, and Judith Bright.
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Nga¯ Morehu ¯
RRP $49.99
256 pages
The Survivors
ISBN 9781927131312 9781927131312
265 x 195 mm
Judith Binney & Gillian Chaplin
Publication: November 2011 (second edition). First published by OUP in 1986.
130 b/w illustrations Histo Hi story ry/Ma /Ma¯ori
For much of women’s history, history, memory is the only way of discovering the past. Other sources simply do not exist. This is true t rue for any history of Máori women in this century. c entury. All the women in this book have lived through times of acute social disturbance. Their voices must be heard. Judith Binney, 1992 In eight remarkable oral histories, Ngá Mórehu brings alive the experience o Máori women rom the mid-twentieth century. century. Heni Brown (above right), Reremoana Koopu, Maaka Jones, Hei Ariki Algie, Heni Sunderland (above let), Miria Rua, Putiputi Onekawa and Te Te Akakura Rua talked with Judith Binney and a nd Gillian Chaplin, sharing sharin g stories and memories. These are the women whose ‘voices must be heard’. The title, ‘the survivors’, reects the women’s connection conne ction with the visionary leader Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Turuki Turuki and his ollowers, who adopted the name ‘Ngá Mórehu’ during the wars o the 1860s. But these women are not only survivors: they are also the chosen ones, the leaders lea ders o their society. society. They speak here o richly diverse lives – o arranged marriages and whángai adoption traditions, o working in both Máori and Pákehá communities. They pay testimony to their strong sense o a shared identity created by religious and community teachings. [T]o read the life histories of these women is a rare privilege. We are swept up into a world of pain, poverty and the sheer grind of daily life in rural villages. … Throughout all the narratives there is a strong sense of taha wairua – spiritual beliefs instilled by inuential whanau elders. To read these stories is to become enveloped in a brilliantly patterned cloak where all the strong threads are bound together with warmth and aroha. Listener, 30 May 1987 Keri Kaa, NZ Listener, Judith Binney, dnzm , frsnz, was the author o many award-winning histories, including Redemption Songs: A Life of Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Turuki (1995) and Encircled Lands: Te Urewera 1820–1921 (2009). Her work will appear also in Tangata Whenua: W henua: An Illustrated History (orthcoming, 2012). Photographer Gillian Chaplin is a director o the Melbourne based Magian Design Studio, specialising in exhibition design around the world.
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Tangata Whenua
RRP $120.00 hardback
496 pages
An Illustrated History
ISBN 9781927131411 9781927131411
290 x 245 mm
Atholl Anderson, Judith Binney & Aroha Harris
Publication: April 2012
Approx 500 illustrations Full colour throughout Histor His tory/M y/Ma a¯ori
A landmark publication, Tangata Whenua portrays the sweep o Máori history rom rom Pacifc origins to the twenty-frst century. century. Through narrative and images, it oers a striking overview o the past, grounded in specifc localities and histories. Fiteen chapters bring together scholarship in history, history, archaeology, archaeology, traditional narratives and oral history. history. Images rom around the country (and rom international museums) include taonga and arteacts, early European sketches and paintings along with contemporary artworks, and many photographs rom collections and newspapers. Placing Máori at the centre o the country’s story, Tangata Whenua begins in the Pacifc and outlines early settlement in New Zealand. A second section covers the period o great change in the nineteenth century, examining how Máori communities were aected by the inux o new technology, religious ideas, trade and literacy. The history then extends orward through the twentieth century – with two world wars, the growth o an urban Máori culture, rising protest, and Treaty claims and settlements. At the beginning o the twenty-frst century, Máori are drawing on both international connections and their ancestral place in Aotearoa. The ways in which growth and development are interwoven with tension and resistance will be evident in the uture as they have been throughout the past. Atholl Anderson (Ngái Tahu) is Proessor Emeritus at the Australian National University. University. An experienced archaeologist, he has published on early New Zealand and Pacifc history, and on Ngái Tahu history. Judith Binney was Proessor Emeritus at the University o Auckland, and an award-winning author au thor o many books on Máori history. history. Aroha Harris (Ngápuhi, Te Te Rarawa) is a member o the Waitangi Tribunal, Tribunal, who teaches teache s history at the University o Auckland. Her publications include history, history, fction and poetry. poetry.
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Treaty of Waitangi Settlements Edited by Nicola Wheen & Janine Hayward
RRP $49.99
300 pages
ISBN 9781927131381 9781927131381
240 x 170 mm
Publication: February 2012
50 b/w illustrations History/ Hist ory/Ma Ma¯ori ori/Treaty /Treaty
The settlement o iwi claims under the Treaty Treaty o Waitangi Waitangi has been b een a prominent eature o New Zealand's political and legal landscape over the last thirty years. It has drawn international attention, as other nations seek ways to build new relationships between indigenous peoples and the state. Here leading scholars rom the felds o law law,, history, history, Mäori studies and politics provide a comprehensive account o the settlement process. The contributors examine the history o Treaty claims and the impact o Treaty settlements. The major m ajor settlements are considered, and their impact on the management and ownership o key resources (such as lands, orests, fsheries). The economic and social consequences or Mäori are debated, along with the impact o the settlement process on the Crown's relationship with Mäori. As the settlement o historical claims draws toward a close (orecast or 2014), this timely book considers the achievements achievemen ts and controversies o Treaty Treaty settlements over the years. How successul has the process been b een in redressing historic grievances? Are Treaty Treaty settlements truly ‘ull and fnal’? Are major issues let unresolved? And how does New Zealand's attempt to build a new relationship between indigenous people and the state rate internationally? Nicola Wheen is Senior Lecturer in Law at the University o Otago. Janine Hayward is Associate Proessor o Politics at the University o Otago. Both have published widely in the felds o law and politics, and together edited The Waitangi Tribunal: Te Roopu Whakamana i te Tiriti o Waitangi (2004). Contributors: Michael Belgrave, Paul James, Andrew Erueti, Maureen Hickey, Hickey, Paerau Paera u Warbrick, Linda Te Aho, Margaret Mutu, Sacha Sach a MacMeeking, Damian Stone, Robert Joseph, Maria Bargh, and Mai Chen.
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Workers in the Margins
RRP $49.99
300 pages
Union Radicals in Post-War New Zealand
ISBN 9781927131398 9781927131398
240 x 170 mm
Cybèle Locke
Publication: March 2012
30 b/w illustrations History
‘Marginalised’ workers o the late twentieth century were those last hired in times o plenty and frst fred in times o recession. Oten women, Mäori, or people rom the Pacifc, they were requently unemployed, and marginalised within the union movement as well as the labour orce. Workers in the Margins tells the story o these workers in the tumultuous years o post-war New Zealand. These were years characterised by massive changes in the workorce, as it expanded to accommodate a growing urban Mäori population and an increasing desire or women to enter paid work. The world o trade unions and employment conicts, such as the 1951 waterront lockout, was vigorous and challenging. As ree market policies deregulated the labour market and splintered the union movement toward the end o the century, century, Te Te Roopu Rawakore o Aotearoa, the national unemployed and benefciaries' movement, gave a new voice to ‘workers in the margins’. The people o this history come to lie through oral histories – rom the poet (and ( and boilermaker) Hone Tuwhare Tuwhare building a palisade at Orakei through to activists Sue Bradord and Jane Stevens working with the unemployed in the 1980s and ’90s. Their experiences speak to the lives o many workers o the early twenty-frst century. century. Cybèle Locke’s Locke’s imaginative use of oral history has allowed her to t o bring to life some signicant ‘grass roots’ gures gures and to recapture the mood and texture of a radical movement. … a substantial contribution to New Zealand scholarship that will be of great interest to all those concerned with social justice. Erik Olssen, Emeritus Eme ritus Proessor, Proessor, University o Otago Cybèle Locke is a graduate o Otago and Auckland universities, who has published widely on labour history. history. Currently a ull-time parent, she was a participant in the activist movements o the late twentieth century. century.
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Encircled Lands
RRP $89.99 hardback
648 pages • 265 x 195 mm
Te Urewera, 1820–1921
ISBN 9781877242441 9781877242441
200 full-colour illustrations
Judith Binney
Published: 2009 NZ Post Book of the Year (2010)
History/ Hist ory/Ma Ma¯ori ori/Treaty /Treaty
Te Urewera in the nineteenth century was a sheltering heartland or those who lived there; or visiting Europeans, it was a orbidding orbi dding wilderness. As the century drew on, however, however, the lands occupied by b y Urewera hapü were dramatically reduced by confscation and orced cession. Government troops brought armed struggle to the territory. Under the agreed terms o peace pe ace in 1872, Te Urewera became an autonomous district, collectively governed by its i ts own leaders – Te Te Whitu Tekau (The Seventy), men who stand tall in any history o Aotearoa New Zealand. In 1896, 189 6, Te Te Rohe Pötae o Te Te Urewera was ormally ratifed as a separate tribal district, the only legally recognised tribal enclave in the country’s history. history. As Premier Richard Seddon acknowledged, earlier promises made to Tuhoe’s Tuhoe’s leaders had been be en ulflled. But in 1921–22 the ‘Urewera District Native Reserve’ was abolished in law. law. The governance o Te Whitu Tekau Tekau was steadily undermined, and Urewera lands progressively alienated rom their original owners by the Crown. a rchived documents, Encircled Lands recovers this history rom a wealth o contemporary archived many written by the Urewera leaders themselves, and over 150 early photographs, along with oral sources and original maps. It explains how the idea o internal sel-government or Tühoe was born – and or a period partly realised. This magisterial account provides the historical context o an idea that has come again to the negotiating table: Tühoe’s never-ending ne ver-ending quest or a constitutional agreement that restores their authority in their lands. 12
The New Zealand Pregnancy Book
RRP $54.99
432 pages
A Guide to Pregnancy Pregnancy,, Birth and a Baby’s First Three Months
ISBN 9781877242403
244 x 185 mm
Published: 2008 (3rd edn)
Full colour throughout
Sue Pullon & Cheryl Benn
Health/Reference/ New Zealand
The New Zealand Pregnancy Book has been used by thousands o parents since it was frst published in 1991. Its ongoing popularity reects the demand or a comprehensive book written expressly or New Zealanders. This invaluable guide oers modern parents and their amilies a wonderul insight into pregnancy and childbirth today. today. Each step o pregnancy, pregnancy, birth and the baby’s frst months is set out with detailed inormation and clear diagrams. In contemporary personal stories and a remarkable set o ull colour photographs, women and men who have recently become parents share some o lie’s most intensely private and deeply-elt times – making this a very special book or New Zealand and New Zealanders. Pregnancy, Pregnancy, birth and early parenting are part o a continuous lie process. This book not only describes the amazing physical and emotional changes that take place in a woman’s body during pregnancy and birth, but also has advice on pre-pregnancy health, common problems and potential difculties, pregnancy care and birth choices, and caring or a new baby. There are practical sections on everything rom exercise and nutrition to baby equipment and nappy-changing, or pregnant women and their support people. The authors, GP Sue Pullon and midwie Cheryl Benn, draw on many years’ proessional and academic experience in general practice and an d midwiery respectively. respectively. They have worked closely with a wider group o experts, along with the publishing and design team, to create an accessible, practical and reliable guide or today’s new parents.
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BWB in Print including new books All editions paperback unless otherwise specifed.
Geoff Bertram and Simon Terry
The Carbon Challenge New Zealand’s Emissions Trading Scheme
A plain language guide to New Zealand’s controversial emissions trading scheme. The authors discuss the range o options available or reducing carbon emissions, and argue or a airer distribution o responsibility. responsibility. ‘Essential reading for all New Zealanders – and especially our children, who will suffer the consequences of continued inaction.’ Proessor Peter Barrett, Victoria University RRP $39.99
224 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781877242465
Series 21
Published: 2010
Contemporary Issues/Environment
Edited by
The Cartwright Papers
Joanna Manning Foreword by
David Skegg
Essays on the Cervical Cancer Inquiry 1987–88
The Cartwright Report o 1988 was a watershed in New Zealand medical medica l history. history. Cogent arguments are presented here in support o Judge Silvia Cartwright’s fndings, and against the revisionist case made by Linda Bryder. Bryder. The harmul outcomes o the ‘unortunate experiment’ at National Women’s Hospital were also confrmed by research rom Otago University in June 2010. RRP $39.99
224 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781877242458
Series 21
Published: 2009
Contemporary Issues/Health
General Editor
A Concise Dictionary of New Zealand Sign Language
Graeme Kennedy
This essential guide to the language or the Dea contains over 2,500 commonly used signs with a helpul introduction. Based on the comprehensive Dictionary of New Zealand Sign Language, Language, the Concise Dictionary is now the only dictionary o New Zealand Sign Language in print.
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RRP $59.99
560 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 187724211X
See also: People of the Eye
Published: 2002
Deaf Studies/Refer Studies/Reference ence
Edited by
A Controversial Churchman
Allan Davidson
Essays on George Selwyn, Bishop of New Zealand and Licheld, and Sarah Selwyn
New Zealand’s frst Anglican bishop was a towering fgure in the New Zealand colonial landscape. Speaking out against Crown practices that dispossessed Mäori won him ew riends. Yet Yet with his wie he was one o the most inuential voices in the early years o European settlement. RRP $49.99
300 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781877242519
50 black and white illustrations
Publication: November 2011
Biography/History
Judith Binney
Encircled Lands Te Urewera, 1820–1921 1820–19 21
Te Urewera was a sheltering heartland or those who lived there; or nineteenth-century Europeans it was a orbidding wilderness. This richly illustrated history o Te Te Rohe Pötae o Te Te Urewera over a hundred years contextualises Tühoe’s never-ending quest or authority in their lands. NZ Post Book o the Year (2010). RRP $89.99 hardback
648 pages • 265 x 195 mm
200 full-colour illustrations ISBN 9781877242441
See also: Te Kerikeri 1770–1850; The Legacy of Guilt; Stories without End
Published: 2009
History/ Hist ory/Ma Ma¯ori/ ori/T Treaty
Margaret Tennant
The Fabric of Welfare Voluntary Organisations, Voluntary Government and Welfare in New Zealand, 1840–2005
This engaging history looks at the overarching structures and the ordinary workings o welare. Stories abound, aboun d, as Margaret Tennant Tennant writes about voluntary organisations and their interwoven connections with government. RRP $49.99
296 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781877242373
History
Published: 2007
Paul Monin
Hauraki Contested 1769–1875
The Hauraki Gul was a hotly contested region during the frst hundred years o European settlement. This account o a region in transormation trans ormation is pertinent today, today, as Treaty settlements are negotiated. J. M. Sherrard Award Award (2004). (20 04). RRP $39.99
272 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 1877242357
50 b/w photographs and paintings
Published: 2001
History/ Hist ory/Ma Ma¯ori/ ori/T Treaty
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James Belich
I Shall Not Die Titokowaru’s War,1868–1869 2nd edition with new introduction
Titokowaru Titokowaru was one o New Zealand’s greatest leaders, who worked in both peace and war to save the Taranaki people rom European invasion in the nineteenth century. century. This is history at its most compelling. Adam Award Award (1990). RRP $39.99
320 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781877242496
50 b/w photographs and paintings
Published: 2010
Histo Hi story/ ry/Ma Ma¯ori
Claudia Orange
An Illustrated History of the Treaty of Waitangi
The history o the Treaty Treaty comes to lie with a wonderul range o photographs, maps and paintings. pai ntings. A companion volume to The Treaty of Waitangi, the up-to-date text is written or the general reader. RRP $39.99
200 pages • 265 x 215 mm
ISBN 1877242160
Over 200 b/w illustrations
Published: 2004
Also by Claudia Orange: The Treaty of Waitangi; The Story of a Treaty Treaty History/ Hist ory/Ma Ma¯ori/ ori/T Treaty
Angela Wanhalla
In/visible Sight The Mixed-Descent Families of Southern New Zealand
Centering her story on the Otago community at Maitapapa, where her great-grandparents were born, Angela Wanhalla (Ngäi Tahu) Tahu) explores the less visible side o colonialism – the world o kinship networks, amilies and communities. Co-published with Athabasca University Press (Canada). RRP $39.99
200 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781877242434
30 b/w photographs and paintings
Published: 2009
See also: Nga¯ i Tahu: A Migration Migrati on Histor H istory y Histo Hi story/ ry/Ma Ma¯ori
Edited by
Last Words
Margot Schwass
Approaches to Death in New Zealand’s Cultures and Faiths
Last Words looks at ways o acknowledging death in dierent cultures and religions. It includes sections on: cultures and aiths; Mäori perspectives; acing death; and grie. Particularly valuable or students and proessionals (nurses, chaplains, uneral directors).
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RRP $34.99
200 pages • 210 x 150 mm
ISBN 1877242349
Reprinted 2011
Published: 2005
Health/Reference
Judith Binney
The Legacy of Guilt A Life of Thomas Kendall
Kendall was one o the frst missionaries to learn te reo Mäori and make his way, way, problematically, problematically, in the Mäori world. This remarkable study o cross-cultural experience won the F. P. Wilson Award or Judith Binney as a young historian. RRP $49.99
252 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 1877242330
30 b/w paintings and photographs
Published: (1968), 2005
See also: Encircled Lands; Stories Without End; Te Kerikeri
2nd edn, new introduction
Biography Biog raphy/His /History tory/Ma /Ma¯ori
Edited by
Letters on the Go
Jessie Munro
The Correspondence of Suzanne Aubert
Suzanne Aubert wrote copious letters throughout her long lie. Her Letters reect her rich riendships, her challenges to the church hierarchy, hierarchy, her engagement e ngagement with politicians, her relationships with the Sisters o Compassion. RRP $69.99
636 pages • 240 x 195 mm
ISBN 9781877242410
50 b/w photographs
Published: 2009
See also: The Story of Suzanne Aubert Aubert Biography/History/Religion
Vincent O'Sullivan Long Journey to the Border A Life of John Mulgan Alone, was John Mulgan, the author o the classic novel Man novel Man Alone, part o a gited yet uneasy group o young New Zealanders who made their mark between the wars. One o New Zealand’s leading writers, Vincent O’Sullivan draws a vivid portrait o an heroic yet enigmatic fgure, a man who came to represent so much about his country and his time. First published by Penguin (2003). RRP $49.99
256 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781927131329 9781927131329
20 b/w photographs
Published: November 2011 (reissue)
Biography
W. H. Oliver
Looking for the Phoenix A Memoir
W. H. Oliver, a central fgure in New Zealand’s intellectual landscape, reects here on the decades o his own lie, and the history that has shaped him. In 2008, W. H. Oliver was honoured with the Prime Minister’s Award or Non-fction, or his contribution to New Zealand history. history. RRP $39.99
200 pages • 216 x 162 mm
ISBN 1877242985
Biography /History
Published: 2002
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Judith Binney Binne y, Mihaia Gillian Chaplin The Prophet Rua Kenana and his and Craig Wallace Community at Maungapohatu Rua Kenana’s community in Te Urewera was established as Túhoe leaders sought to retain control o their ancestral lands. This photographic history traces the lie o the community through to the police assault o 1916, then ollows Rua and his people into the 1930s. 1930 s. An exceptional record o a crucial episode in New Zealand history. history. RRP $49.99
265 x 195 mm
ISBN 9781927131305
256 pages
Publication: November 2011 (2nd edn)
130 b/w illustrations
Sue Pullon and Cheryl Benn
The New Zealand Pregnancy Book
Histo Hi story/ ry/Ma Ma¯ori
A Guide to Pregnancy Pregnancy,, Birth and a Baby's First Three Months Used by thousands since it was frst published in 1991, this invaluable guide oers a wonderul insight into what pregnancy and childbirth childb irth looks like today. today. For pregnant women, their amilies and health proessionals. RRP $54.99 exibind
432 pages • 250 x 190 mm
ISBN 9781877242403
300 full-colour photographs and illustrations
Published: 2008 (3rd edn)
Health/Reference/New Zealand
Judith Binney Binne y, Gillian Chaplin
Nga- Morehu The Survivors
Ngä Mórehu brings alive the experience o eight Mäori women brought up in small North Island rural communities associated with the Ringatú aith. These women are not only ‘survivors’ o years o change and turbulence in the Mäori world, but also leaders in society. society. RRP $49.99
265 x 195 mm
ISBN 9781927131305
256 pages
Publication: November 2011 (2nd edn)
130 b/w illustrations
Edited by
Te Maire Tau and Atholl Anderson
Histo Hi story/ ry/Ma Ma¯ori
- Tahu: A Migration Ngai History The Carrington Text
This magnifcent narrative tells o Ngäi Tahu’s migration rom the Wellington Wellington area into the South Island. The history draws on early accounts by Ngäi Tahu Tahu elders.
18
RRP $69.99
280 pages • 270 x 216 mm
ISBN 9781877242397
80 full-colour illustrations
Published: 2008
Histo Hi story/ ry/Ma Ma¯ori
Edited by
No Ordinary Deal
Jane Kelsey
Unmasking Free Trade and the Trans-Pacic Partnership Agreement
At a time when the global fnancial crisis has exposed deep aws in the global ree market, New Zealand is negotiating a ree-trade agreement to surpass all others. Jane Kelsey heads up a team o expert commentators, with an analysis that exposes the myths o yet another neo-liberal adventure. RRP $39.99
224 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781877242502 9781877242502
Series 21
Published: 2010
Contemporary Issues/Economics
Rachel McKee
People of the Eye Stories from the Deaf World
In a language rarely translated to print, the ‘people o the eye’ tell their stories, bringing to lie a world little known outside Dea culture. The storytellers are old and young, and their lives reect the diversity and commonality o Dea experience. Photographs by b y Bruce Connew. Connew. RRP $39.99
264 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 187724208X 187724208X
Reprinted 2011
Published: 2001
Deaf Studies
Judith Binney
Stories Without End Essays 1975–2010
These ‘stories without end’ stand alongside Judith Binney’s remarkable publications o orty years. They orm narratives that ow one into another – essays rom a writer who was also one o New Zealand’s greatest scholars. RRP $49.99
400 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781877242472 9781877242472
50 full-colour illustrations
Published: 2010
See also: Encircled Lands; Te Kerikeri; The Legacy of Guilt Histo Hi story/ ry/Ma Ma¯ori
Claudia Orange
The Story of a Treaty Treaty
Telling the story o the Treaty Treaty over nearly two centuries, this lively short history is written or both students and general readers. Another reliable text rom award-winning author, author, Claudia Orange. RRP $19.99
80 pages • 240 x 175 mm
ISBN 0046410538 0046410538 Published: 1989
See also: An Illustrated History of the Treaty of Waitangi; The Treaty of Waitangi
50 b/w illustrations
History/ His tory/Ma Ma¯ori/ ori/T Treaty
19
Jessie Munro
The Story of Suzanne Aubert
This beautiully written story o a radical nun who ounded a religious congregation sold thousands o copies when it won the Book o the Year Award in the Montana Book Awards in 1997. [A]n outstanding work of historical biography … [that] deserves every accolade it is receiving and is worthy of its distinguished placement. Rt Hon. David Lange RRP $49.99
496 pages • 240 x 195 mm
ISBN 9781877242427
50 b/w photographs
Published: 2009
See also: Letters on the Go Biography/History/Religion
Charlotte Macdonald
Strong, Beautiful and Modern National Fitness in Australia, Britain, Canada and New Zealand, 1935–1960
From the late 1930s, a wave o state-sponsored ‘national’ ftness programmes swept Britain and its ormer colonies. Now largely orgotten, they probably laid the oundation or the twentieth century’s obsession with ftness – and the pursuit o ‘the better body’. RRP $49.99
256 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781927131404
30 b/w photographs and posters
Publication: November 2011
History
Atholl Anderson, Judith Binney and Aroha Harris
Tangata Whenua An Illustrated History
A landmark publication, Tangata Whenua portrays the sweep o Máori history in New Zealand rom Pacifc origins to the twenty-frst century. century. Richly illustrated, this outstanding work o scholarship presents a striking narrative o the country’s Máori past. RRP $120.00 hardback
496 pages • 290 x 245 mm
ISBN 9781927131411
Approx 500 paintings, drawings, maps, photographs, full colour throughout
Publication: April 2012
Histo Hi story/ ry/Ma Ma¯ori
Edited by
Te Kerikeri 1770–1850
Judith Binney
The Meeting Pool
Acting as a ‘meeting pool’ or Mäori and European in the early nineteenth century, the Kerikeri Basin is today one o the country’s major heritage sites. This richly illustrated collection tells a vivid story about a signifcant place.
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RRP $34.99
134 pages • 240 x 195 mm
ISBN 9781877242380
50 full-colour illustrations
Published: 2007
Histo Hi story/ ry/Ma Ma¯ori
Claudia Orange
The Treaty of Waitangi 2nd edition, with new introduction
Claudia Orange’s comprehensive study remains the standard work on the Treaty. Winner o the Goodman Fielder Wattie Award in 1988, the book looks at the place o the Treaty Treaty in New Zealand history rom its making in the early nineteenth century through to the renewed engagement o the late twentieth century. RRP $49.99
300 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781877242489 9781877242489
See also: An Illustrated History of the Treaty of Waitangi; The Story of a Treaty
Published: 1987, 2010
History His tory/Ma /Ma¯ori/ ori/Treaty Treaty
Edited by Nicola Treaty of Waitangi Wheen and Janine Settlements Hayward The settlement o iwi claims under the Treaty Treaty o Waitangi Waitangi has been a prominent eature o New Zealand’s political landscape over the last thirty years. In this timely book, leading scholars oer the frst analysis o the economic and social impact o the settlement process. RRP $49.99
300 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781927131381 9781927131381
History His tory/Ma /Ma¯ori/ ori/Treaty Treaty
Publication: February 2012
Anne Smith
Understanding Children’s Development
This New Zealand text on child development is used by early childhood educators, students, and parents. Connecting current theory with the local context, it provides valuable inormation or understanding children today. today. RRP $39.99
358 pages • 230 x 150 mm
ISBN 090891296X 090891296X
4th edn
Published: 1998
Education/Reference
Alan Ward
An Unsettled History Treaty Claims in New Zealand Today
Alan Ward Ward writes lucidly about the history behind behi nd the claims arising rom the Treaty o Waitangi. His account reveals a treaty made and then repeatedly breached. The impact o the past upon the present has rarely been analysed to such immediate purpose. RRP $34.99
212 pages • 230 x 150 mm
ISBN 0908912978 0908912978
50 b/w photographs
Published: 1999
History His tory/Ma /Ma¯ori/ ori/Treaty Treaty
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Edited by
The Waitangi Tribunal Tribunal
Janine Hayward and Nicola Wheen The Waitangi Waitangi Tribunal Tribunal was established in 1975 to hear claims by Mäori against the Crown arising under the Treaty Treaty.. This book brings together the work o leading historians, lawyers, and analysts to oer a detailed review o the Tribunal’s Tribunal’s place in contemporary New Zealand. RRP $49.99
272 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 1877242322
Treaty/Contemporary Issues
Published: 2004
Cybèle Locke
Workers in the Margins Union Radicals in Post-War New Zealand
Last hired in times o plenty and frst fred in times o recession, marginalised workers were requently in and out o employment, and usually peripheral in the union movement o the late twentieth century ce ntury.. Workers in the Margins tells the story o these workers in post-war New Zealand. RRP $49.99
300 pages • 240 x 170 mm
ISBN 9781927131398
30 black and white photographs
Publication: March 2012
History
Lloyd Geering
Wrestling With God The Story of my Life
‘I am my lie story, story, as yet still open-ended open-ende d and unfnished ... thus to fnd out who I am, I must recall the story o my lie l ie as clearly and honestly as I can.’ Theologian Lloyd Geering writes autobiography with his usual sharp analysis – and he has a ascinating story to tell. RRP $39.99
230 pages • 230 x 152 mm
ISBN 1877424365
Biography/Religion
Published: 2006
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Illustrations Cover (left to right): The head of a chief of New Zealand…, Z ealand…, Sydney Parkinson, Alexander Turnbull Library, Library, PUBL-0037-16. Heni Sunderland, photograph by Gillian Chaplin. A new n ew dawn? Stanley Davis, The New Zealand Railways Magazine , Volume 3, Issue 7 (November 1, 1928). Sarah Harriet Selwyn, G. Richmond, 1841, John Kinder Theological Th eological Library. Library. Boy Boy movie movie poster,, Taika Waititi poster Waititi and the New Zealand Film Commission. Detail from John Mulgan and other World War II soldiers from New Zealand, Greece, Alexander Turnbull Library, DA-12924. Internal: Page 3, photographs by Reg Graham, Neil Pardington and others. Page 4, A new dawn? Stanley Davis, The New Zealand Railways Magazine , Volume 3, Issue 7 (November 1, 1928). Page 6, John Mulgan and other World War II soldiers from New Zealand, Greece. Alexander Turnbull Library, DA-12924. Page 7, George Selwyn (left), Sarah Selwyn (right), G. Richmond, 1841. John Kinder Theological Library Library.. Page 8, (left) Heni Sunderland, photograph by Gillian Chaplin, 1984; (right) Heni Brown, photograph by Gillian Chaplin, 1982. Page 9, (left) The head of a chief of New Zealand…, Sydney Parkinson. Alexander Turnbull Library Li brary,, PUBL-0037-16; (right) Boy movie poster, Taika Taika Waititi and the New Zealand Film Commission. Page 10, Minister in Charge of Treaty Negotiations, Margaret Wilson, and Ngati Ruanui negotiator Steve Heremaia, with Mate Carr (far right) and staff from the Ofce of Treaty Settlements at the signing of the Ngati Ruanui Deed of Settlement with the Crown in May 2000. Photograph by the Daily News . Page 11, Westeld strikers marching with the March Against Unemployment, 1988, John Leckie.
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