Jnzl Journal Of New Zealand Literature Libros Populares
Jnzl Journal Of New Zealand Literature Biografía y Hechos
La Abadía de Nuestra Señora de la Estrella del Sur[1] (en inglés: Abbey of Our Lady of the Southern Star) es una abadía cisterciense situada en una remota zona rural de la Isla Norte, Nueva Zelanda, en la diócesis de Palmerston Norte. Se trata de un monasterio de tradición trapense (es decir, la Orden Cisterciense de la Estricta Observancia). El monasterio se apoya gestionando una granja lechera. Se encuentra en Kopua cerca Takapau entre Dannevirke y Waipukurau, en la Bahía central de Hawke. Historia En 1948 una pareja de agricultores en Kopua, Thomas y Rosalie Prescott, decidió ceder su granja de 360 hectáreas (890 acres) a la Iglesia católica con la idea a largo plazo de crear una escuela de agricultura. Por invitación del Arzobispo Peter McKeefry, en la propiedad donada a la iglesia, el 9 de junio de 1954 seis monjes de la abadía del Monte Melleray (Waterford, Irlanda) llegaron a Kopua. La comunidad fundadora fue dirigida por el padre Basil Hayes. Otros grupos llegaron desde Irlanda en 1955, 1958 y 1959. John Kelly y Conleth O'Byrne completaron el contingente Irlandés llegando en 1967 y 1969 respectivamente. En 1959 la Orden elevó a Kupua a una Abadía. Joseph Murphy fue elegido Abad el 9 de abril de 1960 y continuó en el cargo hasta 1988. Véase también Monasterio Abadía Priorato Referencias. Descubre los libros populares de Jnzl Journal Of New Zealand Literature. Encuentra los 100 libros más populares de Jnzl Journal Of New Zealand Literature
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Can Identity be Helped? Landfall, Chaos, And the Creation of a New Zealand National Literature.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIn his anthology of New Zealand Verse Mr Allen Curnow was at some pains to show us, to our own astonishment, that we had something of an emerging national consciousness of poetic d...
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A Snook Cocked at Totalitarianism': Ian Gordon & New Zealand New Writing (Curnow, CAXTON AND THE CANON (Part II))
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureI During the mid to late 1930s a new and vital literary culture flourished in New Zealand, centred in large part on Denis Glover's fledgling Caxton Press and on that other Christch...
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Whole Men'? Re-Reading Masculinity in Frank Sargeson's Stories.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureThe work of Frank Sargeson has long been a privileged site of enquiry for New Zealand literary critics. The canonical status of his texts has meant that many of our understandings ...
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From Fretful Sleepers to Juice Extractors: Versions of the 1951 Waterfront Dispute in New Zealand Writing, 1952-1986 (Report)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureI Writing about John Mulgan in 1979, C. K. Stead looked back to the 1951 Waterfront Dispute, which he perceived as playing the same role in his own life as the 1932 Queen Street Ri...
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Lyricism Language & History: New Zealand Poetry in 1992.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureWhat do we have here? An avantgarde sonnet? A language poem? A Burroughs cut up? A postmodern appropriation? Any or all of the above? Actually it's fourteen lines, one each, for th...
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'Encircling Tubes of Being': New Zealand As Hypothetical Site in Janet Frame's A State of Siege (1966).
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureOver the years, several critics have noted Janet Frame's ambivalence towards character and her tendency to deploy characters in her novels as 'philosophical embodiment[s] of an ide...
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A New Tramp Abroad': Sargeson in Europe.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIn the late 1920s, (1) increasingly alienated from his family and disillusioned with the prospect of life as a solicitor in Hamilton, Frank Sargeson left for Europe, using money he...
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Literary Recession: New Zealand Fiction, 1985-Mid 1986 (Part I: SURVEYS 1985-86)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureReading Lawrence Jones's comments in JNZL/3 on the year 198384 in New Zealand fiction with the task of reviewing the following eighteen months in mind is rather like looking back o...
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Tickling History: Maurice Shadbolt and the New Zealand Wars (A Symposium on Historical Fiction) (Critical Essay)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIt is important that postcolonial writers (for the present I include both Maori and Pakeha writers under that banner) address the past and challenge colonial or imperial versions o...
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The Rise of Comedy: A Survey of New Zealand Novels of 1991 (1991 SURVEY: THE NOVEL)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand Literature[Roger Robinson wrote this survey in 1992. Ed.] First the statistics, since they are important. Fifteen novels in 1991 from seven different publishers, and as many short story coll...
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Repetitious Beginnings: New Zealand Literary History in the Late 1980S.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureNew Zealanders tend to see themselves as differentiated from Americans by virtue of their greater honesty and simplicity as a people, and above all by their resistance to slick ima...
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Barry Barclay: Guardian and Activist (Book Review)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureReview of Mana Tuturu: Maori Treasures and Intellectual Properly Rights by Barry Barclay (Auckland: Auckland University Press, 2005). Barry Barclay's most recent film is the 200...
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Celebrating Our Writers: 1936, 1951 Part II: 1951 (New Zealand Writers' Conference)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand Literature[For Part I of this paper, see Journal of New Zealand Literature Issue 10, 1992.] Authors' Week 1936 was successful enough for its organisers to want to make it an annual event, bu...
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Alfred Domett, Maori and New Zealand Writing (Critical Essay)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureAlfred Domett came to the New Zealand Company settlement at Nelson in 1842 as a landowning colonist. He remained in New Zealand for the next thirty years and rose to considerable p...
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Not So Hopped-up (Classic New Zealand Poets in Performance) (Book Review)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureReview of Classic New Zealand Poets in Performance, selected by Jack Ross and Jan Kemp. Edited by Jack Ross (Auckland: Auckland University Press, 2006). In his now infamous revi...
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Disapprobation, Disobedience and the Nation in Katherine Mansfield's New Zealand Stories.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIn the most wellknown and celebrated of her New Zealand short stories, Katherine Mansfield's view of the settler nation into which she was born is strongly refracted through her po...
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New Drama 1988-89: an Expanding Field.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIn surveying the territory 'New Zealand drama' for a literary journal, I have followed my predecessors in attending first to the most 'literary' form of our theatre: that is, scrip...
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Re-Writing the Maps: The New Zealand Short Story, 1990 (Report)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand Literature... out of wherever inspiration springs from, sprang this title: PACIFIC MAPS AND FICTION(S) ... I wanted to give, or should I say, the title wanted two meanings: Fiction as a bran...
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On the Margins? New Zealand Little Magazines from Freed to and (Part II: CRITICISM & C)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureI propose to examine here the recent emergence in this country of an oppositional literary scene capable of mounting a sustained challenge to New Zealand's major literary instituti...
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The Rainbirds--and Other Dunedins (Dunedin, New Zealand) (Critical Essay)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureThe Rainbirds, first published in 1968, presents a familiar impression of New Zealanders. People in Dunedin where the novel is set are perceived as shallow, materialistic, puritani...
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Poetry in New Zealand 1988-89.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureTwo years is perhaps rather brief a span for accurate trendspotting, but if activity is a sign of vitality, New Zealand poetry was alive and well in 198889. Some 50 new collections...
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Futurity and Epic: William Golder's 'the New Zealand Survey' (1867) and the Formation of British New Zealand (Critical Essay)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIt is a measure of the disjunction between location and knowledge in the experience of the early colonists that William Golder should have begun the composition of his epic poem of...
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Towards a Prehistory of the Gothic Mode in Nineteenth-Century New Zealand Writing.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIn a long passage in his 1986 novel Symmes Hole, Ian Wedde describes the thoughts of pilot and PakehaMaori James Heberley on coming ashore near Waitara with a New Zealand Company d...
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The Notebooks, Journal and Papers of Katherine Mansfield: Is Any of This Her Diary?
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureThe Murry editions of the Journal and Scrapbook of Katherine Mansfield are, for scholarship purposes, now obsolete, although my copy of the Journal still has a special place on my ...
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The New Cultural Studies (But Where Was the Old?) (Book Review)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureReview of On Display: New Essay in Cultural Studies, edited and introduced by Anna Smith and Lydia Wevers (Wellington: Victoria University Press, 2004). Despite Alex Calder's cl...
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Rites of Passage: New Zealand Poetry in Transition 1985-1987: Part I: January 1985-June 1986 (Part I: SURVEYS 1985-86)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureThe title assumes these three years can be seen as a time of major transition in New Zealand poetry. The threepart scenario of Van Gennep's ritesdepassage (before, during and after...
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William Golder's the New Zealand Survey (1867): the Relation Between Poetry and Photography As Media of Representation (Critical Essay)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureWilliam Golder's The New Zealand Survey includes an epic poem recounting the origin and evolution of New Zealand as a landmass which becomes, with the arrival first of Maori and th...
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Review of Picking up the Traces: The Making of a New Zealand Literary Culture 1932-1945 (Book Review)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureReview of Picking Up The Traces: The Making of a New Zealand Literary Culture 19321945 by Lawrence Jones (Wellington: Victoria University Press, 2003). In the last year five new...
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Romancing the Other: Oracles & Miracles, A Literature of Dreamland (A Symposium on Historical Fiction) (Critical Essay)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureCONSTRUCTING THE DISCOURSE OF THE OTHER A number of recent New Zealand 'historical' fictions are, I would argue, more interesting for what they can tell us about current anxieti...
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The Influence of American Poetry on Contemporary Poetic Practice in New Zealand (Speech)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand Literature[This is the text of a lecture given at the 12th Australia and New Zealand American Studies Association Conference held at University of Auckland 1986.] To begin with, something...
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'Man of Words': Charles Brasch: Editor Supremo, Rabbi, & Dutch Uncle of New Zealand Letters (Curnow, CAXTON AND THE CANON (Part Ii)) (Company Overview)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureI I wish to trace the Jewishness of Charles Brasch in terms of the creative antinomy of his nature: native intellectual and New Zealand secular Jewone of the talmidei hakhamim (...
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History (Never) Repeats: Pakeha Identity, Novels and the New Zealand Wars (Essay)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIt is now a relative commonplace in New Zealand literary studies to say that Pakeha culture has a fraught relationship with its colonial origins. This relationship has been foregro...
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Editing Waikato's Christian Missionary Journals.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureJohn Morgan arrived in New Zealand in 1833 as a missionary of the Church Missionary Society. He served in Kerikeri before assisting with the founding of nine new stations at Puriri...
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Bliss was It in That Dawn ...': from Phoenix to New Poems 1932-34 (CURNOW, CAXTON AND THE CANON (Part II))
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureTalking to Michael Beveridge in 1970 about his writing life in the mid1930s, Frank Sargeson said 'It was almost like Wordsworth you know, "Bliss was it in that dawn .../but to be y...
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Forms of Settlement: Colonial Space, Time and Genre from Adventure in New Zealand to the Fossil Pits.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureNew Zealand's colonial literature is characterised by its blurring of generic boundaries, which critics have typically regarded as a sign of cultural lack and immaturity. Joan Stev...
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Early Castings for a Canon: Some 1920S Perceptions of New Zealand Literary Achievements.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIn the 1920s, the decade during which Katherine Mansfield died, did Pakeha New Zealanders have any sense of a 'New Zealand literature', or was literary accomplishment regarded as t...
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Madness, Philosophy and Literature: A Reading of Janet Frame's Faces in the Water.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureJanet Frame's second novel, Faces in the Water and Michel Foucault's Madness and Civilisation were both published in the same year, 1961, albeit in two countries at opposite ends o...
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A Pre-Settlement Record of Life in the Waikato: The Journals of Benjamin Yate Ashwell.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureMuch that was written in the earliest years of European settlement in New Zealand remains unpublished. This paper is simply a presentation of some passages from the Journals of the...
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Sexual Violence and Return in Indigenous Francophone and Anglophone Pacific Literatures: The Case of Dewe Gorode's L'epave (Critical Essay)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureSocalled 'domestic' or conjugal violence is currently emerging as a central theme in literatures across the Pacific. Given that brutal treatment of women has been a stereotype of '...
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The Piano As Symbolic Capital in New Zealand Fiction, 1860-1940 (Critical Essay)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIn The Godwits Fly (1938), Robin Hyde demonstrates a prescient understanding of what Pierre Bourdieu would term, forty years later, 'symbolic capital'. (1) The protagonist's mother...
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The Penguin Looks at the Oxford: An Assessment of the Oxford History of New Zealand Literature in English.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureThe Penguin History of New Zealand Literature appeared in 1989 and The Oxford History of New Zealand Literature in English a bit over a year later, the first a solo venture by me, ...
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Nineteenth Century New Zealand Drama: Kainga of the Ladye Birds (Part II: CRITICISM & C)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureKainga of the Ladye Birds, an unlikely 'semiMaori pantomime', has not been listed in any of the bibliographies of New Zealand drama, although it appears to be the earliest extant d...
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The Notebooks, Journal, And Papers of Katherine Mansfield: Is Any of This Her Diary?
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureThe Murry editions of the Journal and Scrapbook of Katherine Mansfield are, for scholarship purposes, now obsolete, although my copy of the Journal still has a special place on my ...
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Between Participation and Transgression: New Zealand Drama, 1991-1992 (Surveys) (Company Overview)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIn Aristophanes' Frogs, Dionysus disguises himself as Heraldes and descends to Hades, where he oversees a competition between Aeschylus and Euripides to establish who is the greate...
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"No Cloud to Hide Their Dear Resplendencies": The Uses of Poetry in 1840S New Zealand.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIn this essay I look at the early forms of poetic production and consumption in New Zealandwhat was written and what was read. I argue that poetry served a function that was neithe...
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New Zealand Poetry in 1990 (Essay)
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureA busy publishing year for New Zealand verse, 1990 saw over thirty new titles in print. These included an outstanding first collection, the last poems of a major figure in the deve...
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The 'Encyclopaedic God-Professor': John Macmillan Brown and the Discipline of English in Colonial New Zealand.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureJohn Macmillan Brown, the first chair of English and Classics at Canterbury University College, was perhaps the most prominent academic during the first thirty years of tertiary ed...
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Literary Biography in New Zealand.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureI do not have a biography. Or, more precisely, from the first line I ever wrote, I no longer see myself, I'm no longer an image for myself. I can't imagine myself, can't crystalliz...
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Blending and Belonging: Blanche Baughan and Scenic New Zealand.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureNew Zealand's number one classic song is called 'Nature'. (1) It is not so much the words people remember'through falling leaves I pick my way slowly ...'as the radiant glory of a ...
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Going Native: How the New Zealand Settler Became Indigenous.
JNZL: Journal of New Zealand LiteratureIn his 1989 work, Fear and Temptation: The Image of the Indigene in Canadian, Australian and New Zealand Literatures, (1) Terry Goldie describes the dilemma of the Canadian settler...