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Kiwi Icons and the Re‐Settlement of New Zealand as Colonial Space

Identifieur interne : 000881 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 000880; suivant : 000882

Kiwi Icons and the Re‐Settlement of New Zealand as Colonial Space

Auteurs : Katie Pickles [Nouvelle-Zélande]

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:7511F7E47AC94F36D8F86433014701E0D41E04AA

Abstract

This article offers a critical reading of the celebratory biographical and autobiographical texts for three ‘kiwi icons’. It argues that kiwi icons signal the enduring influence of British colonialism upon national imaginings – through a process that I term ‘re‐settlement’. I demonstrate how representations of Barry Crump, Sir Edmund Hillary and Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, prominent New Zealanders during the 1990s, are entwined with dominant constructions of New Zealand society. Further, I explore how these kiwi icons are constructed to serve the quest for nationhood; an endeavour, it is argued, that is about the reinvention of settlement mythology that involves the continuation of particular narratives of colonisation from the past.

Url:
DOI: 10.1111/j.1745-7939.2002.tb01631.x


Affiliations:


Links toward previous steps (curation, corpus...)


Le document en format XML

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   |area=    MusiqueCeltiqueV1
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   |texte=   Kiwi Icons and the Re‐Settlement of New Zealand as Colonial Space
}}

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