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Mother and the other: situating New Zealand women's captivity narratives in a transcolonial settler culture of anxiety

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posted on 2024-07-13, 00:02 authored by Andreas Brieger
This article analyses nineteenth-century women's captivity narratives in the white settler colony New Zealand. It asks how white femininity and indigenous masculinity are represented and how these notions relate to representations of white masculinity and indigenous femininity. Moreover, the article examines the relationship between colonial gender identities and British bourgeois ideals of respectable gender images. By comparing the New Zealand case with the early modern North American narrative of Mary Rowlandson and the Australian Eliza Fraser stories, the author argues that New Zealand can be included in a transcolonial culture of captivity, as it shares a transcolonial repertoire of discursiverhetorics, strategies and anxieties.

History

ISSN

1838-0743

Journal title

settler colonial studies

Volume

1

Issue

2

Pagination

22 pp

Publisher

Swinburne University of Technology

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2011 The author. Authors retain copyright of their articles and are free to publish them elsewhere. Back issues are published here under an Australian Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd) licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/au/), which means that the work may be freely copied and distributed, provided that it is not altered in any way or used for commercial purposes, and provided that proper acknowledgement is given to the author and to the journal.

Language

eng

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