The Colonizing Pen: Mid-Nineteenth-Century European Writing about Maori
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Date
2001
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Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington
Abstract
Maori and European New Zealanders are currently engaged in intense debate about their relationship. Inevitably, part of this debate focuses on the past, in particular on the mid-nineteenth century when European colonization of New Zealand occurred.
The writing produced by European colonists in this period is a major source of information on the attitudes and assumptions of settlers as they encountered Maori, yet in practice the writing produced by the colonizing pen is little studied. This lack of attention from literary historians and critics limits our understanding of the period.
"The Colonizing Pen: Mid-Nineteenth-Century European Writing about Maori" attempts to fill this gap. Four types of writing are examined: prose accounts, translations, newspaper journalism, and novels. Traditional literary critical analysis is applied to both published and unpublished material; it is supported by in-depth biographical information, discussion of historical and cultural contexts, and reference, when useful, to post-colonial literary criticism.
This analysis reveals an increasing elaboration of writing by the colonizing pen as the century progresses, with writing about Maori changing from simple prose accounts to fully-fledged novels. It reveals, too, the radically transformative nature of this writing, in which Maori were processed, so to speak, for consumption by a European readership. A complex, paradoxical mixture of attitudes towards Maori is discovered, one which combines fear and desire, nostalgia and illusion. Some of the writing exhibits a careful editing of its Maori subject matter, an editing which is however covert and which has remained largely unacknowledged.
The thesis concludes that the writing of mid-nineteenth-century New Zealand is more complex and interesting than is generally allowed, and suggests that we need to study it in greater detail if we are to arrive at a clearer understanding of the period's culture, attitudes and discourse.
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Keywords
Minorities in literature, New Zealand literature, 19th century, History and criticism, Tuhinga kōrero