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Description
TWELVE DYNAMIC ESSAYS BY LEADING NEW ZEALAND THINKERS MARK
125 YEARS SINCE NEW ZEALAND WON THE RIGHT TO VOTE
It’s 125 years since New Zealand women won the right to vote. But the battle
for the right to so much else is ongoing. This first volume in the Te Papa
‘Thinking About’ series is published to mark the 125th anniversary of suffrage,
and brings together provocative, insightful and energetically argued essays
by 12 leading New Zealand writers and thinkers, based around objects from
Te Papa’s collection.
Sandra Coney, Holly Walker, Barbara Brookes, Tina Makereti, Sue Bradford,
Morgan Godfery, Golriz Ghahraman, Dame Fiona Kidman, Ben Schrader,
Charlotte MacDonald, Grace Taylor and Megan Whelan examine how New Zealand
women have fared since 1893.
About the Author
Dr Bronwyn Labrum is the Head of New Zealand and Pacific Cultures at the
Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa. She is the author of Women’s
History: Researching and Writing Women’s History in New Zealand (BWB,
1993); and co-editor of Fragments: New Zealand Social and Cultural History
(AUP, 2000); and Looking Flash: Clothing in Aotearoa New Zealand (AUP,
2007) and the best-selling Real Modern: Everyday New Zealand in the 1950s
and 1960s (Te Papa Press), which was short-listed for the 2016 Ockham New
Zealand Book Awards. She has also published articles and chapters both
nationally and internationally on the history of women; asylums and mental
health; the history of welfare services; and material culture and museums,
contributing to significant edited collections and reference works in these
areas. She blogs at MATTER (bronwynlabrum@wordpress.com).