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Waikanae Watch

~ issues relevant to Waikanae people and others

Waikanae Watch

Monthly Archives: July 2021

news from the Mahara Gallery

29 Thursday Jul 2021

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(media release)

Dr Rangihīroa Panoho with his work, ALOHA series, 2012–2021, in Mahara Gallery July 2021 (photo by Kevin Ramshaw)

Writer, curator and artist Dr Rangihīroa Panoho delivers a reminder in his ĀTĀROA exhibition, which has opened at Mahara Gallery, that the passage of time has not shortened the shadow cast by Ngā Pakanga Whenua o Mua the New Zealand Land Wars.

ĀTĀROA, ‘the long shadow’ of the New Zealand Land Wars is a mixture of paintings, photographs and poetry. As well as being a reminder of the lasting effects of the Wars, it pays tribute to ngā toa, the Māori warriors, who died as a result of the conflict.

The New Zealand Land Wars began in Wairau in 1843, spread North in 1845, to the Wellington region in 1846 and later to Taranaki, Tāmaki, Waikato, Bay of Plenty and other regions in the 1860s.

“They have a far more powerful presence and legacy in Aotearoa than is widely understood today,” says Panoho. “These events and the values that drove the conflicts continue to cast a shadow across contemporary Aotearoa.

“Te Rangihaeata’s pā at Pāuatahanui is a only a short distance south of the Mahara Gallery. The shadow of the events captured in this exhibition is then not simply an historical reference, but rather a contemporary presence.

“In 2021 the New Zealand Land Wars teach us that there is a continuing need for aroha as Māori and tauiwi make efforts to acknowledge one another and to avoid the darker, more tangible presence of Ātāroa returning.”

Dr Panoho says the paintings and photos are used to suggest the values and ideals that ngā toa fought for in their efforts to maintain their mana whenua and their authority over their tribal lands.

“The photographs are largely factual records of battle sites in the Northern Wars, but perhaps not the ones conventionally taken. The land itself and the natural environment is actually the strongest witness to these conflicts. 

“On that tilted, elevated site at Ruapekapeka (1845–1846) one can still actively imagine the scene in the remains of the earth fortifications and in the pūriri forest and native bush that surrounds the site.

“I have returned many times to Ōhaeawai, Ruapekapeka and more recently Ōtuihu, Bay of Islands, to photograph, wānanga and research. I am not looking for plaques or monuments; I am searching for other more intangible reminders.”

Dr Rangihīroa Panoho is affiliated with Ngāti Manu, Te Parawhau and Te Uriroroi hapū of Te Tai Tokerau. He has connections of descent from both leaders of resistance and of invasion. 

He has a background teaching and curating Māori/Pacific shows in the Whanganui/Wellington region and is the author of the influential Māori Art History, Architecture, Landscape and Theory (Bateman, 2017).

The motivation for ĀTĀROA came in 2020 when he completed a mōteatea and an essay for the photographer Bruce Connew’s book A Vocabulary recording text from Ngā Pakanga Whenua o Mua monuments. 

A key outcome was the sense that the writing wasn’t enough to honour the fallen. 

“I was moved by their stand and their sacrifices against overwhelming odds and I wanted to recognise that voice in my small creative contribution. The support of my hapū, the Mahara Gallery and Creative New Zealand has been central in helping to realise this vision.” 

“ĀTĀROA presents a richly informed and passionate response by Panoho to a critical time and events in our history that remain vital to gain a fuller understanding for our future,” says Mahara Gallery Director Janet Bayly.

She says Dr Panoho’s work, and that of writer, photographer and poet Paul Thompson, will be the last to be exhibited in the Gallery before it moves off-site in September for a multi-million dollar building redevelopment.

ĀTĀROA, ‘the long shadow’ of the New Zealand Land Wars in mainSPACE and Asemica, artist’s books, in NewSPACE are scheduled to show until 18 September, 2021.

A floor-talk with Dr Panoho will take place Saturday 21 August from 2:30pm.

Free entry. All welcome.

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the Mahara Hotel circa 1925

29 Thursday Jul 2021

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Lord Kitchener (1850-1916; KG, KP, GCB, OM, GCSI, GCMG, GCIE, PC) himself was a patron! This must have been circa 1910 when he went on a tour of Australia and New Zealand. Probably he took the train in a regal carriage — in those days it would have been more comfortable than a road trip — and when staying in the town perhaps he took a walk around it. He may have done this with Lord Plunket who was Governor of New Zealand from 1904 to 1910.

A short history was in the Kapiti News in 2016:

“The name Mahara, meaning remembrance, was chosen, possibly out of respect for victims of the Boer War, and was located on the main highway.

“Mahara House was built in 1902 by A.A. Brown for Hemi Matenga Waipunahau, brother of the paramount Chief Wi Parata Te Kakakura of the Ngati Awa and Ngati Toa.”

Read the rest

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the way things are: the top 1 percenters and everyone else, both Maori and Pakeha

29 Thursday Jul 2021

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Posted by Waikanae watchers | Filed under Uncategorized

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armchair travel: driving tour of Bel Air, Los Angeles

29 Thursday Jul 2021

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Bel Air is the wealthiest suburban area of Los Angeles with a median income of $207,938 (about $NZ 297,000 although that doesn’t seem to go far: the typical value of homes in Bel Air is about $4 million or $NZ 6.4 million; “the median two-bedroom rent is $US 5,500 per month and income of $US 220,000 is required: (“the 40x rule is the rule of thumb for most landlords in pretty much every major city. This says that the household income must be at least 40 times the monthly rent”); elevation is about 600 ft (183 metres) above sea level; the population is about 8,700 — more facts

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for some light relief: a better idea for a Hollywood movie

29 Thursday Jul 2021

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from ACT: the column Stuff wouldn’t run

28 Wednesday Jul 2021

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Stuff.co.nz was happy to run a column from John Tamihere accusing David Seymour of an “insidious, sophisticated and covert form of race-based politics” but they wouldn’t publish David’s below response because they didn’t like the “tone” of the article.

If you wonder why Stuff is stuffed and people don’t trust the media, here is the perfect example.


There’s a dilemma we all face when personally attacked. Just ignore them, (like most people probably have already), or set the record straight. Ignoring them is easier, but maybe they think throwing enough mud will see some stick. Setting the record straight takes more time, and risks giving them and their argument more attention than deserved.

The dilemma is harder when the attack is dishonest, but from someone who’s done little to earn your respect. We’ve all been there, and John Tamihere’s article about me, The subtle dig at Māori in race-based politics and how it’s swinging voters’ judgement, is so filled with outright mistruths, that the record needs to be set straight.

Tamihere’s argument is summarised in his words: ‘Act Leader David Seymour plays a far more insidious, sophisticated and covert form of race-based politics.’ He goes on to say that my criticism of the Reserve Bank spending $400,000 on a monstrous piece of artwork is really an attack on Māori because the artwork was supposed to represent Tane Mahuta, the god of the forest.

He goes on to say that I wouldn’t criticise the America’s Cup losing hundreds of millions of dollars because it’s a white man’s sport. Here’s the problem. I am on the record criticising the America’s Cup getting taxpayer money. Just Google ‘David Seymour America’s Cup circus.’

Tamihere goes on to ask ‘Can you imagine a Waka Festival losing thousands of dollars being swept under the carpet by Seymour?’ Well, actually, something similar did happen when I was responsible for charter schools in the previous Government.

Te Kāpehu Whetū, a charter school in Whangarei was attacked for using its flexibility of funding to buy a waka. I believed, and still do, that charter schools were a power of good, and defended that school for that action among many others connected with the policy. They were a policy supported by ACT and the Iwi Chairs Forum because they were good for Māori.

That’s where the wheels really fall off Tamihere’s argument. On the basic facts, he’s not only a little bit wrong, but shilling the exact opposite of the truth. But on the wider issue of who really cares about Māori kids’ opportunity, it is Tamihere who’s played politics.

He forgot to mention his Waipareira Trust applied to operate a charter school, apparently believing in the power of the policy. He went through most of the application process then tried to renegotiate the terms he’d signed up to at the last minute.

He thought he could steamroll the young first term MP in charge of charter schools. Big mistake. When he didn’t get his way, he publicly trashed the policy that was working for disadvantaged kids, including those at his old friend Willie Jackson’s charter school, Te Kura Māori o Waatea.

It would be easy to dismiss Tamihere. He had a short parliamentary career, that ended with losing his seat, before losing his radio show for gross misogynistic comments, then running a disastrous campaign for the Auckland Mayoralty, then failing to win a seat in a short-lived revival as co-leader of the Māori Party. Why give him time?

The problem is that he’s doing such a terrible disservice to the very people he claims to represent. Just like his disgraceful conduct over the charter school affair, he is prepared to play politics without truth on the very important cause of solving poverty and improving education for Māori.

In his mind, to attack egregious waste at the Reserve Bank, gangs, and welfare abuse, is to attack Māori. Really? Do Māori speak with one voice? If we listen to John Tamihere, being Māori means you can’t want responsible Government spending, gangs to be treated with the contempt they deserve, and welfare dependency to be reduced.

ACT says all New Zealanders benefit from better policy. All New Zealanders want less crime, less tax, and greater independence. The idea we can’t have honest conversations about the challenges our country faces because we might offend Māori doesn’t just stop us making progress. Ironically enough, it is patronising and belittling of Māori who, unlike John, overwhelmingly want a better world through better policy.

John was once billed as a future Prime Minister. Now the best lesson he shows young New Zealanders of all backgrounds is not to waste their talent on hubris.


Stuff has long abandoned any pretence to be anything other than a Public Relations / Propaganda arm for the Jacinda government and its beliefs. As above, it is not interested in balance, doesn’t want to give any coverage to opposing views to the government policies let alone its personalities, and when its paid trolls can’t answer an argument with credible evidence, simply indulge in character assassination.  And all of this is heavily subsidized by the Jacinda government with Taxpayers’ money.  —Eds

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Figures from Israel show most Cv infections are of people who have had the jab

28 Wednesday Jul 2021

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Let’s see the Stuffers try to explain that…

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Critical Race Theory: What it is and how to fight it

28 Wednesday Jul 2021

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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Despite PM Jacinda’s denials, this is a part of her govenment’s cultural-Marxist plans for Apartheid as a justification for them.

According to an ACT media release: “There are 4,000 staff at the Ministry of Education and since 2018, 2,516 have attended the course Courageous Conversations about Race according to Written Parliamentary Questions asked by ACT. The Ministry of Education courses have cost taxpayer $670,000. In an email to Chris Hipkins office, uncovered by Newstalk ZB, the director of the course confirms “white privilege” is part of the course.”


Article sourced from Imprimis via Bassett, Brash and Hide

About the author: Christopher F. Rufo is founder and director of Battlefront, a public policy research center. He is a graduate of Georgetown University and a former Lincoln Fellow at the Claremont Institute for the Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy. As executive director at the Documentary Foundation, he has directed four films for PBS, including most recently America Lost, which explores life in Youngstown, Ohio, Memphis, Tennessee, and Stockton, California. He is also a contributing editor of City Journal, where he covers topics including critical race theory, homelessness, addiction, and crime.


 

Critical race theory is fast becoming America’s new institutional orthodoxy. Yet most Americans have never heard of it—and of those who have, many don’t understand it. It’s time for this to change. We need to know what it is so we can know how to fight it.

In explaining critical race theory, it helps to begin with a brief history of Marxism. Originally, the Marxist Left built its political program on the theory of class conflict. Marx believed that the primary characteristic of industrial societies was the imbalance of power between capitalists and workers. The solution to that imbalance, according to Marx, was revolution: the workers would eventually gain consciousness of their plight, seize the means of production, overthrow the capitalist class, and usher in a new socialist society.

During the 20th century, a number of regimes underwent Marxist-style revolutions, and each ended in disaster. Socialist governments in the Soviet Union, China, Cambodia, Cuba, and elsewhere racked up a body count of nearly 100 million of their own people. They are remembered for their gulags, show trials, executions, and mass starvations. In practice, Marx’s ideas unleashed man’s darkest brutalities.

By the mid-1960s, Marxist intellectuals in the West had begun to acknowledge these failures. They recoiled at revelations of Soviet atrocities and came to realize that workers’ revolutions would never occur in Western Europe or the United States, where there were large middle classes and rapidly improving standards of living. Americans in particular had never developed a sense of class consciousness or class division. Most Americans believed in the American dream—the idea that they could transcend their origins through education, hard work, and good citizenship.

But rather than abandon their Leftist political project, Marxist scholars in the West simply adapted their revolutionary theory to the social and racial unrest of the 1960s. Abandoning Marx’s economic dialectic of capitalists and workers, they substituted race for class and sought to create a revolutionary coalition of the dispossessed based on racial and ethnic categories.

Fortunately, the early proponents of this revolutionary coalition in the U.S. lost out in the 1960s to the civil rights movement, which sought instead the fulfillment of the American promise of freedom and equality under the law. Americans preferred the idea of improving their country to that of overthrowing it. The vision of Martin Luther King, Jr., President Johnson’s pursuit of the Great Society, and the restoration of law and order promised by President Nixon in his 1968 campaign defined the post-1960s American political consensus.

But the radical Left has proved resilient and enduring—which is where critical race theory comes in.

WHAT IT IS

Critical race theory is an academic discipline, formulated in the 1990s, built on the intellectual framework of identity-based Marxism. Relegated for many years to universities and obscure academic journals, over the past decade it has increasingly become the default ideology in our public institutions. It has been injected into government agencies, public school systems, teacher training programs, and corporate human resources departments in the form of diversity training programs, human resources modules, public policy frameworks, and school curricula.

There are a series of euphemisms deployed by its supporters to describe critical race theory, including “equity,” “social justice,” “diversity and inclusion,” and “culturally responsive teaching.” Critical race theorists, masters of language construction, realize that “neo-Marxism” would be a hard sell. Equity, on the other hand, sounds non-threatening and is easily confused with the American principle of equality. But the distinction is vast and important. Indeed, equality—the principle proclaimed in the Declaration of Independence, defended in the Civil War, and codified into law with the 14th and 15th Amendments, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Voting Rights Act of 1965—is explicitly rejected by critical race theorists. To them, equality represents “mere nondiscrimination” and provides “camouflage” for white supremacy, patriarchy, and oppression.

In contrast to equality, equity as defined and promoted by critical race theorists is little more than reformulated Marxism. In the name of equity, UCLA Law Professor and critical race theorist Cheryl Harris has proposed suspending private property rights, seizing land and wealth and redistributing them along racial lines. Critical race guru Ibram X. Kendi, who directs the Center for Antiracist Research at Boston University, has proposed the creation of a federal Department of Antiracism. This department would be independent of (i.e., unaccountable to) the elected branches of government, and would have the power to nullify, veto, or abolish any law at any level of government and curtail the speech of political leaders and others who are deemed insufficiently “antiracist.”

One practical result of the creation of such a department would be the overthrow of capitalism, since according to Kendi, “In order to truly be antiracist, you also have to truly be anti-capitalist.” In other words, identity is the means and Marxism is the end.

An equity-based form of government would mean the end not only of private property, but also of individual rights, equality under the law, federalism, and freedom of speech. These would be replaced by race-based redistribution of wealth, group-based rights, active discrimination, and omnipotent bureaucratic authority. Historically, the accusation of “anti-Americanism” has been overused. But in this case, it’s not a matter of interpretation—critical race theory prescribes a revolutionary program that would overturn the principles of the Declaration and destroy the remaining structure of the Constitution.

HOW IT WORKS

What does critical race theory look like in practice? Last year, I authored a series of reports focused on critical race theory in the federal government. The FBI was holding workshops on intersectionality theory. The Department of Homeland Security was telling white employees they were committing “microinequities” and had been “socialized into oppressor roles.” The Treasury Department held a training session telling staff members that “virtually all white people contribute to racism” and that they must convert “everyone in the federal government” to the ideology of “antiracism.” And the Sandia National Laboratories, which designs America’s nuclear arsenal, sent white male executives to a three-day reeducation camp, where they were told that “white male culture” was analogous to the “KKK,” “white supremacists,” and “mass killings.” The executives were then forced to renounce their “white male privilege” and write letters of apology to fictitious women and people of color.

This year, I produced another series of reports focused on critical race theory in education. In Cupertino, California, an elementary school forced first-graders to deconstruct their racial and sexual identities, and rank themselves according to their “power and privilege.” In Springfield, Missouri, a middle school forced teachers to locate themselves on an “oppression matrix,” based on the idea that straight, white, English-speaking, Christian males are members of the oppressor class and must atone for their privilege and “covert white supremacy.” In Philadelphia, an elementary school forced fifth-graders to celebrate “Black communism” and simulate a Black Power rally to free 1960s radical Angela Davis from prison, where she had once been held on charges of murder. And in Seattle, the school district told white teachers that they are guilty of “spirit murder” against black children and must “bankrupt [their] privilege in acknowledgement of [their] thieved inheritance.”

I’m just one investigative journalist, but I’ve developed a database of more than 1,000 of these stories. When I say that critical race theory is becoming the operating ideology of our public institutions, it is not an exaggeration—from the universities to bureaucracies to k-12 school systems, critical race theory has permeated the collective intelligence and decision-making process of American government, with no sign of slowing down.

This is a revolutionary change. When originally established, these government institutions were presented as neutral, technocratic, and oriented towards broadly-held perceptions of the public good. Today, under the increasing sway of critical race theory and related ideologies, they are being turned against the American people. This isn’t limited to the permanent bureaucracy in Washington, D.C., but is true as well of institutions in the states, even in red states, and it is spreading to county public health departments, small Midwestern school districts, and more. This ideology will not stop until it has devoured all of our institutions.

FUTILE RESISTANCE

Thus far, attempts to halt the encroachment of critical race theory have been ineffective. There are a number of reasons for this.

First, too many Americans have developed an acute fear of speaking up about social and political issues, especially those involving race. According to a recent Gallup poll, 77 percent of conservatives are afraid to share their political beliefs publicly. Worried about getting mobbed on social media, fired from their jobs, or worse, they remain quiet, largely ceding the public debate to those pushing these anti-American ideologies. Consequently, the institutions themselves become monocultures: dogmatic, suspicious, and hostile to a diversity of opinion. Conservatives in both the federal government and public school systems have told me that their “equity and inclusion” departments serve as political offices, searching for and stamping out any dissent from the official orthodoxy.

Second, critical race theorists have constructed their argument like a mousetrap. Disagreement with their program becomes irrefutable evidence of a dissenter’s “white fragility,” “unconscious bias,” or “internalized white supremacy.” I’ve seen this projection of false consciousness on their opponents play out dozens of times in my reporting. Diversity trainers will make an outrageous claim—such as “all whites are intrinsically oppressors” or “white teachers are guilty of spirit murdering black children”—and then when confronted with disagreement, they adopt a patronizing tone and explain that participants who feel “defensiveness” or “anger” are reacting out of guilt and shame. Dissenters are instructed to remain silent, “lean into the discomfort,” and accept their “complicity in white supremacy.”

Third, Americans across the political spectrum have failed to separate the premise of critical race theory from its conclusion. Its premise—that American history includes slavery and other injustices, and that we should examine and learn from that history—is undeniable. But its revolutionary conclusion—that America was founded on and defined by racism and that our founding principles, our Constitution, and our way of life should be overthrown—does not rightly, much less necessarily, follow.

Fourth and finally, the writers and activists who have had the courage to speak out against critical race theory have tended to address it on the theoretical level, pointing out the theory’s logical contradictions and dishonest account of history. These criticisms are worthy and good, but they move the debate into the academic realm, which is friendly terrain for proponents of critical race theory. They fail to force defenders of this revolutionary ideology to defend the practical consequences of their ideas in the realm of politics.

POLITICAL ENGAGEMENT

No longer simply an academic matter, critical race theory has become a tool of political power. To borrow a phrase from the Marxist theoretician Antonio Gramsci, it is fast achieving “cultural hegemony” in America’s public institutions. More and more, it is driving the vast machinery of the state and society. If we want to succeed in opposing it, we must address it politically at every level.

Critical race theorists must be confronted with and forced to speak to the facts. Do they support public schools separating first-graders into groups of “oppressors” and “oppressed”? Do they support mandatory curricula teaching that “all white people play a part in perpetuating systemic racism”? Do they support public schools instructing white parents to become “white traitors” and advocate for “white abolition”? Do they want those who work in government to be required to undergo this kind of reeducation? How about managers and workers in corporate America? How about the men and women in our military? How about every one of us?

There are three parts to a successful strategy to defeat the forces of critical race theory: governmental action, grassroots mobilization, and an appeal to principle.

We already see examples of governmental action. Last year, one of my reports led President Trump to issue an executive order banning critical race theory-based training programs in the federal government. President Biden rescinded this order on his first day in office, but it provides a model for governors and municipal leaders to follow. This year, several state legislatures have introduced bills to achieve the same goal: preventing public institutions from conducting programs that stereotype, scapegoat, or demean people on the basis of race. And I have organized a coalition of attorneys to file lawsuits against schools and government agencies that impose critical race theory-based programs on grounds of the First Amendment (which protects citizens from compelled speech), the Fourteenth Amendment (which provides equal protection under the law), and the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (which prohibits public institutions from discriminating on the basis of race).

On the grassroots level, a multiracial and bipartisan coalition is emerging to do battle against critical race theory. Parents are mobilizing against racially divisive curricula in public schools and employees are increasingly speaking out against Orwellian reeducation in the workplace. When they see what is happening, Americans are naturally outraged that critical race theory promotes three ideas—race essentialism, collective guilt, and neo-segregation—which violate the basic principles of equality and justice. Anecdotally, many Chinese-Americans have told me that having survived the Cultural Revolution in their former country, they refuse to let the same thing happen here.

In terms of principles, we need to employ our own moral language rather than allow ourselves to be confined by the categories of critical race theory. For example, we often find ourselves debating “diversity.” Diversity as most of us understand it is generally good, all things being equal, but it is of secondary value. We should be talking about and aiming at excellence, a common standard that challenges people of all backgrounds to achieve their potential. On the scale of desirable ends, excellence beats diversity every time.

Similarly, in addition to pointing out the dishonesty of the historical narrative on which critical race theory is predicated, we must promote the true story of America—a story that is honest about injustices in American history, but that places them in the context of our nation’s high ideals and the progress we have made towards realizing them. Genuine American history is rich with stories of achievements and sacrifices that will move the hearts of Americans—in stark contrast to the grim and pessimistic narrative pressed by critical race theorists.

Above all, we must have courage—the fundamental virtue required in our time. Courage to stand and speak the truth. Courage to withstand epithets. Courage to face the mob. Courage to shrug off the scorn of the elites. When enough of us overcome the fear that currently prevents so many from speaking out, the hold of critical race theory will begin to slip. And courage begets courage. It’s easy to stop a lone dissenter; it’s much harder to stop 10, 20, 100, 1,000, 1,000,000, or more who stand up together for the principles of America.

Truth and justice are on our side. If we can muster the courage, we will win.

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talk on the Historical Novel

28 Wednesday Jul 2021

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by Geoffrey Churchman

At last night’s Kapiti Historical Society meeting Desiree Jury spoke on this subject in which she is well qualified, having written a 900-page PhD on it in the 1970s.

It is a very popular fiction genre and although professional historians don’t take historical novels seriously, there has long been a big market for them.  Many, of course, get turned into movies.

Not surprisingly, Desiree has written her own historical novel — Two Shadows — which has a post-Napoleonic Wars context with settings in England and Australia. This is available from Amazon as either a paper or e-book.

But first a definition. According to britannica.com an historical novel is “a novel that has as its setting a period of history and that attempts to convey the spirit, manners, and social conditions of a past age with realistic detail and fidelity (which is in some cases only apparent fidelity) to historical fact. The work may deal with actual historical personages, as does Robert Graves’s I, Claudius (1934), or it may contain a mixture of fictional and historical characters.”

The first such book I read was Man Alone by John Mulgan from 1939 in secondary school English class. As it covered the years of the Great Depression in NZ in the first half of the 1930s, at the time it wouldn’t have been viewed as historic, but would be now.

Desiree covered facts and myth in the modern English historical novel and looked at some modern writers who have set the standards. She also examined aspects of this genre such as narrative focus, the place of necessary anachronisms (in dialogue particularly), style, and the importance of selecting a credible storyteller who describes everything to the reader. She also provided a quick tour of some of the great books which have stood the test of time and before the meeting sent a list of recommendations of novels and authors to get into.

This was the list she supplied:

Rosemary Sutcliff: Sword at Sunset

Rudyard Kipling: Kim, The Knife and the Naked Chalk (in Rewards and Fairies), The Man Who Would Be King

Sir Walter Scott: Waverley, Ivanhoe

Alessandro Mazzoni: The Betrothed (I Promessi Sposi)

Victor Hugo: Les Misérables

Leo Tolstoy: War and Peace

Boris Pasternak: Doctor Zhivago

Guiseppe di Lampedusa: The Leopard

Naomi Mitchison: The Conquered, The Corn King and the Spring Queen, Cleopatra’ s People

Robert Graves: I, Claudius, Claudius the God

Alfred Duggan: Knight with Armour, Conscience of the King, Three’s Company, God and My Right, Count Bohemond

Mary Renault: The Last of the Wine, The King Must Die, The Bull from the SeaFire from Heaven, The Persian Boy

Zoé Oldenbourg: The World is Not Enough

Maurice Druon: The Iron King (The Accursed Kings series)

Marguerite Yourcenar: Memoirs of Hadrian

Patrick O’Brien: Master and Commander (Aubrey/Maturin series)

C.J.Sansom: Dissolution (Shardlake Tudor series)

Hilary Mantel: Wolf Hall, Bring Up the Bodies, The Mirror and the Light (Thomas Cromwell trilogy)

Robert Harris: Lustrum, Imperium, Dictator (Cicero trilogy)

Stephen Pressberg: Gates of Fire, The Afghan Campaign

Bárbara Mujica: Sister Teresa

VARIATIONS ON  A THEME: The Great Game

George Macdonald Frazer: the Flashman novels

Philip Henscher: The Mulberry Empire

Stephen Pressfield: The Afghan Campaign, Beast of War (1988 movie)

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not only in NZ: podcaster says he was offered “significant” money by UK Government to push China virus info

28 Wednesday Jul 2021

Posted by Waikanae watchers in Uncategorized

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By its own admission, Stuff took $600 K from the Jacinda government to do this by surreptitious means (see earlier post). Unlike Stuff, however, this podcaster had principles.


disinformation

A podcaster says he was offered a “significant” amount of money by the UK government to push Cv information but refused, instead asserting that people should “speak to your Doctor.”

Tim Cocker is a television and radio personality who primarily fronts sports content, but he was apparently contacted by the state and offered cash to use his platform to amplify what authorities want people to think about the coronavirus and vaccines.

“Been offered (and declined) significant amount of cash to “give Covid Information” to my podcast listeners,” tweeted Cocker.

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