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An account of how transplanted Britons and others turned themselves into New Zealanders, a distinct group of people with their own songs and sports, symbols and opinions, political traditions and sense of self. Looking at the arrival of steamships and the telegraph, at 'God's Own' and the kiwi, rugby and votes for women, Ron Palenski identifies the nineteenth-century origins of the sense of New Zealandness.

Produktbeschreibung
An account of how transplanted Britons and others turned themselves into New Zealanders, a distinct group of people with their own songs and sports, symbols and opinions, political traditions and sense of self. Looking at the arrival of steamships and the telegraph, at 'God's Own' and the kiwi, rugby and votes for women, Ron Palenski identifies the nineteenth-century origins of the sense of New Zealandness.
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Autorenporträt
Ron Palenski is a journalist and historian. He is a former a senior correspondent for the New Zealand Press Association in Europe, a former assistant and acting editor of the Dominion and Dominion Sunday Times, and the cofounder of the New Zealand Hall of Fame. He is the author of several books, including How We Saw the War, Kiwi Battlefields, and On This Day in New Zealand.