Books by Judith Binney
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Rua Kenana was an extraordinary prophetic leader from the Urewera. Resisting threats to expel the Tuhoe people from their ancestral lands, he established a remarkable community at Maungapohatu, identifying himself as the 'Mihaia' or 'Messiah' for Tuhoe. Judith Binney, Gillian Cha ...
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For much of women's history, memory is the only way of discovering the past. Other sources simply do not exist. This is true for any history of Maori women in this century. All the women in this book have lived through times of acute social disturbance. Their voices must be heard ...
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The text of one of the 2007 Hocken lectures, given by Dr Judith Binney. "This lecture is in part about biography - with a little autobiography included." Dr Binney is emeritus professor of Auckland University and one of New Zealand's most distinguished historians.
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Te Kooti is mostly remembered as an outstanding guerrilla fighter, but in this biography equal weight is given to his leadership after the wars. Redemption Songs rests on oral and written narratives and includes more than 170 photographs.
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The women featured in this text are from small rural communities associated with the Ringatu faith, the Maori religious movement founded by Te Kooti Arikirangi Te Turuki. It looks at their life stories as they underwent a change in their social structure and way of life.
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This work is a history of the Maori prophetic leader Rua Kenana. It looks at both Rua and his people, in the community at Maungapohatu in the Urewera. It is the story of the destruction of this community by the government during the First World War, and of the struggle to start o ...
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This biography of Te Kooti Te Turuki, a Maori guerilla fighter, places equal weight on his leadership after the wars. This text rests on oral narratives, recorded sayings and song texts, and the diaries and letters of Te Kooti himself to record this period of New Zealand history.
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The story of two communities, Maori and Pakeha, over the years 1820-1920. In the early nineteenth century the pakeha came to establish an 'English island' in the Pacific, and by the early twentieth century a recognisable nation had emerged - but for the Maori the tale is one of l ...
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In this collection of essays, writers explore the construction of history within a political process: the changing impact of the Treaty of Waitangi. Judith Binney looks at Maori oral narratives from colonial times, and Angela Ballara reinforces the importance of using Maori langu ...
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