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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 July 2014
Rudyard Kipling thought New Zealand “last, loneliest, least.” No so its historiography. New Zealand can claim an inspired corps of scholars who are probing various aspects of the past. Austin Mitchell, scholar and parliamentarian, whimsically wrote, “New Zealand is one of the few countries having more books than history.” Amusing as this perception is, the fact remains that historians of the New Zealand experience have been pouring out an incredible stream of work—in theses, articles, and books; and this flow is not likely to be dammed in the future, as more adventuresome scholars investigate aspects of class, race, ethnicity, community, health, and related matters. A glance at the available bibliographies provides proof of the swelling stream of writing. The New Zealand Journal of History, which began publication in 1967, ranks as the principal, but by no means only, periodical publishing New Zealand history. The maturity of this journal as a vehicle for New Zealand-related scholarship is a testament to how national history has come into its professional phase, and added sophisticated perspectives and techniques to previous studies which in times past, as in other nation-states, sometimes bordered on the antiquarian.
The recent, 1981, publication of the Oxford History of New Zealand, edited by W.H. Oliver with B.R. Williams and comprising contributions from sixteen scholars, has been widely praised as a new look at the national experience, though reviewers note an internal preoccupation and an inadequate attention to external relations. Neither Japan nor Pearl Harbor is mentioned. The preoccupations and progressions are with New Zealand's society, its anxieties, conflicts, and apprehensions. Gone is the day of lauding the British connection; independence and nationhood mean self-examination even at the possible expense of introspection.
This essay was written when Professor Gough was William Evans Visiting Professor at the University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand, in 1982.
1 I owe the Kipling reference to Robin Winks. Mitchell, Austin, Politics and People in New Zealand (Christchurch, 1969), p. 13.Google Scholar
2 As a testament to the volume of works, see Bagnall, A.G., New Zealand National Bibliography to the year 1960, 5 vols. (Wellington, 1967–1973)Google Scholar; also, Crager, Doris M., A List of Doctoral Dissertations on New Zealand (Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1967)Google Scholar, Index to New Zealand Periodicals (Wellington, 1940-)Google Scholar, and the annual New Zealand National Bibliography (Wellington, 1966-).Google Scholar
3 See reviews by Sinclair, Keith, Shannon, Richard, Hammer, D.A. and Ward, Alan, in New Zealand Journal of History 16, 1 (April 1982): 68–78.Google Scholar
4 Sinclair, quoted in Winks, Robin W., ed., The Historiography of the British Empire Commonwealth (Durham, N.C., 1966), p. 175.Google Scholar
5 See, for instance, Schwimmer, Erik, ed., The Maori People in the Nineteen-Sixties (Auckland, 1968)Google Scholar; Kawharu, I.H., ed., Conflict and Compromise: Essays on the Maori since Colonization (Wellington, Sydney and London, 1975)Google Scholar; Vaughan, Graham, ed., Racial Issues in New Zealand (Auckland, 1972)Google Scholar; and Harre, John, Maori and Pakeha: A Study of Mixed Marriages in New Zealand (Wellington, 1966).Google Scholar
6 Starke, J.S., The ANZUS Treaty Alliance (Cambridge, 1969)Google Scholar; SirSpender, Percy, Exercises in Diplomacy (Sydney, 1969)Google Scholar. Lissington, M.P., New Zealand and the United States 1840-1944 (Wellington, 1972)Google Scholar, and New Zealand and Japan, 1900-1941 (Wellington, 1972)Google Scholar. Vigor, P.H., “The Soviet View of Australia and New Zealand”, Journal of the Royal United Service Institute for Defence Studies 118, 3 (1973)Google Scholar; and Howard, Michael, “The Lonely Antipodes? British Reflections on the Future of Australia and New Zealand,” Round Table no. 245 (1972): 77–83.Google Scholar