Unpacking the Kists: The Scots in New Zealand, by Brad Patterson, Tom Brooking, and Jim McAloon. Montreal & Kingston, London, Ithaca, McGill-Queen's University Press, 2013. xx, 412 pp. $100 Cdn (cloth). Unpacking the Kists: The Scots in New Zealand is an inter-disciplinary exploration of the Scottish emigrant experience in New Zealand. While historians have long claimed that New Zealand was more influenced by Scottish culture than anywhere else outside of Scotland, this is the first work to examine these claims in-depth and analyze the ways in which Scots negotiated with and affected their new environment. With the recent increase in ethnic and migration history, principally with regards to the Scottish diaspora, this book provides a particularly welcome, indeed needed, addition to present scholarship. The book is roughly organized into four parts. Following the first chapter, which explains the work's rationale and methodology, chapters two and three examine the statistical research used for the project. They provide a rigorous analysis of the movements, demographics and communities of Scots in New Zealand over different phases of settlement. Through a series of comparative studies of Scottish communities in New Zealand and Scotland, these chapters provide the quantitative groundwork for the more focused case studies that follow. The following section, encompassing chapters four through seven, looks at the impact that Scots had on New Zealand society, through examinations of their economic successes in relation to other British emigrants (particularly the English), their participation in civil society, their impact on the New Zealand environment, and their participation in Scottish ethnic associational culture. Chapters eight and nine examine the ways in which Scots maintained (or relinquished) their Scottishness within the private sphere; exploring the ways that the Scottish emigrants engaged with Scottish and colonial literature, religion, leisure activities and folkways. Finally, Chapter ten places the experience of Scots in New Zealand in a global context. Each chapter challenges long-held stereotypes, explaining why they were created and presenting the realities. One of the main contributions of this book is its successful demonstration of the duality of the Scottish New Zealand experience, one of two conflicting, yet at the same time congruous, cultures--Scottish and British. By primarily employing case studies, this work provides a robust analysis of the ways in which Scots shaped their identity in relation to the land of their ancestors, but also to the land they lived in. Not driven by generalizations based on stereotypes but by quantitative and qualitative data and research, this work provides an unrivalled examination of the Scottish migrant's understanding of themselves in the New Zealand landscape, society, and culture. …
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