Abstract

Introduction: New Zealand's Empire - Katie Pickles and Catharine Coleborne Part I: 'Empire at home' 1. Te Karere Maori and the defence of Empire, 1855-60 - Kenton Storey 2. An imperial icon Indigenised: the Queen Victoria Memorial at Ohinemutu - Mark Stocker 3. 'Two branches of the brown Polynesians': ethnographic fieldwork, colonial governmentality and the 'dance of agency' - Conal McCarthy Part II: Imperial mobility 4. Travelling the Tasman world: travel writing and narratives of transit - Anna Johnston 5. Law's mobility: vagrancy and imperial legality in the trans-Tasman colonial world, 1860s-1914 - Catharine Coleborne 6. 'The World's Fernery': New Zealand, fern albums, and nineteenth-century fern fever - Molly Duggins Part III: New Zealand's Pacific Empire 7. From Sudan to Samoa: imperial legacies and cultures in New Zealand's rule over the Mandated Territory of Western Samoa - Patricia O'Brien 8. 'Fiji is really the Honolulu of the Dominion': tourism, empire and New Zealand's Pacific, c.1900-35 - Frances Steel 9. Empire in the eyes of the beholder: New Zealand in the Pacific through French eyes - Adrian Muckle 1900-55 10. War surplus? New Zealand and American children of Indigenous women in Samoa, the Cook Islands, and Tokelau - Judith A. Bennett Part IV Inside and outside Empire 11. Official occasions and vernacular voices: New Zealand's British Empire and Commonwealth Games, 1950-90 - Michael Dawson 12. Australia as New Zealand's western frontier, 1965-95 - Rosemary Baird and Philippa Mein Smith 13. Southern outreach: New Zealand claims Antarctica from the 'heroic era' to the twenty-first century - Katie Pickles 14. A radical reinterpretation of New Zealand history: apology, remorse and reconciliation - Giselle Byrnes Glossary Index

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