
New Zealand's Responses to the 1916 Rising
Description
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This book examines what distinguished New Zealand's response to the Rising and its aftermath - particularly from Australian and Canadian responses, the two Dominions whose constitutional relations to the United Kingdom were frequently cited in determining Irish independence. Organized chronologically, it opens with a chapter detailing the ANZACS' role in retaking Dublin. Chapters two and three chart the response of Australasian women to the Rising and the politics of gender and violence encoded in private and newspaper reports. Chapter four examines the cultural politics of Dunedin, the financial capital of New Zealand at that time, as representative of one type of response, while chapters five and six investigate specific Catholic responses nationally and internationally. Chapter seven draws on extensive archival research to investigate the ways New Zealand's Fenian families negotiated conscription even while they sought to continue to promote the Republican cause. The next two chapters chart contrasting responses to the aftermath-one detailing shifts in attitude in an Australian Catholic newspaper between 1916 and 1919; the other analysing the rise, triumph, and demise of New Zealand's virulent Protestant Political Association. The final chapter situates the New Zealand response within the constitutional consequences of the Rising for the British Empire.
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Content
- Intro
- Half Title
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction by Peter Kuch
- 1 'The Empire Strikes Back': Anzacs and the Easter Rising 1916 Jeff Kildea
- 2 Women of the Rising in the Australian and New Zealand Press Dianne Hall
- 3 'It would really . matter tremendously': New Zealand women and the 1916 Rising Lisa Marr
- 4 Play v. Play: The Otago Daily Times and the Dunedin stage as a regional New Zealand response to the Easter Rising 1916 Peter Kuch
- 5 Harry Holland, The Maoriland Worker, and the Easter Rising Jim McAloon
- 6 Bishop Henry Cleary and the North King Street Murders Rory Sweetman
- 7 Rebel Hearts: New Zealand's fenian families and the Easter Rising Sean Brosnahan
- 8 Challenging Times: The Irish-Catholic press in Dunedin and Adelaide, 1916-19 Stephanie James
- 9 'A most cruel and bitter campaign of slander and vituperation': Easter Week 1916 and the rise of the Protestant Political Association Brad Patterson
- 10 'Too great to be unconnected with us': Reactions to the i9i6 Easter Rising in the British Empire and the United States Malcolm Campbell
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Back Cover
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