3. Aotearoa / New Zealand

Andrewes, Frazer (1995). Representations of masculinity in postwar New Zealand, 1945–1960. Thesis (MA—History—University of Auckland.

Andrewes, Frazer (1998). Demonstrable virility: images of masculinity in the 1956 Springbok Rugby Tour of New Zealand. International Journal of the History of Sport,15, 119–136.

Andrewes, Frazer (1999). The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit: White–Collar Masculinity in Post–War New Zealand. In Caroline Daley, & Deborah Montgomerie (Eds.). The Gendered Kiwi. Auckland: AucklandUniversity Press.

Bannister, Matthew (2002). White Man’s Soul: pakeha masculinities in popular music of New Zealand / Aotearoa. PhD thesis, University of Auckland.

Bannister, Matthew (2005). Kiwi Blokes: Recontextualising White New Zealand Masculinities in a Global Setting. Genders, 42. http://www.genders.org/g42/g42_bannister.html

Berg, L. D. (1998). Reading (post)colonial history: masculinity, “race,”and rebellious natives in the Waikato, New Zealand, 1863. Historical Geography,26, 101–127.

Berg, L. D. (1999). A (White) Man of his Times? Sir George Grey and the Narration of Hegemonic Masculinity in Victorian New Zealand. In Law, R. Campbell, H., & Dolan, J. (Eds.), Masculinities in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Palmerston North: Dunmore Press.

Campbell, H. (2000). The Glass Phallus: Pub(lic) Masculinity and Drinking in Rural New Zealand. Rural Sociology, 65(4), 562–581.

Campbell, H., Law, R., & Honeyfield, J. (1999).”What it Means to be a Man”: Hegemonic Masculinity and the Reinvention of Beer. In Law, R. Campbell, H., & Dolan, J. (Eds.), Masculinities in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Palmerston North: Dunmore Press.

Campbell, Hugh (2006). Real men, real locals, and real workers: realizing masculinity in small-town New Zealand. In Campbell, H., Bell, M., & Finney, M. (Eds.). Country boys: masculinity and rural life. University Park, Pa: Pennsylvania State University Press.

Campbell, Russel (1995). Dismembering the Kiwi Bloke: Representations of Masculinity in Braindead, Desperate Remedies and The Piano. Illusions,24, 2–9.

Campbell, Russel (2007). The Kiwi Bloke: The Representation of Pakeha Masculinity in NZ Cinema. In Ian Conrich & Stuart Murray (Eds.), Contemporary New Zealand Cinema. WayneStateUniversity.

Cooper, A. (1999). Nation of Heroes, Nation of Men: Masculinity in Maurice Shadbolt’s Once on Chunuk Bair. In Law, R. Campbell, H. & Dolan, J. (Eds.), Masculinities in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Palmerston North: Dunmore Press.

Daley, Caroline, & Deborah Montgomerie (Eds.) (1999). The Gendered Kiwi. Auckland: AucklandUniversity Press.

Dunstall, G. (2004). Frontier and/or cultural fragment? Interpretations of violence in colonial New Zealand. Social History,29, 59–83.

Eyes, M. G. (1992). Virility and respectability: goldfield fiction and male culture in colonial New Zealand, 1865–1914. Thesis (Ph.D.)—VictoriaUniversity of Wellington.

Fox, Alistair (200[8]). The Ship of Dreams: Masculinity in contemporary Pakeha and Maori fiction of Aotearoa/New Zealand. Forthcoming from Otago University Press.

Havemann, L. (1997). Deconstructing ‘masculinity’: men and masculinities in three New Zealand films. Thesis (M. Arts)—University of Waikato.

Hill, L. (1991). What it means to be a Lion Red man: alcohol advertising and Kiwi masculinity. Women’s Studies Journal,1, 65–85.

Hokowhitu, Brendan. (2004). Tackling Maori Masculinity: A colonial geneaology of savagery and sport. Contemporary Pacific, 16(2), Fall, pp. 259-284.

Hokowhitu, Brendan. (2005). Rugby and Tino Rangatiratanga: early Maori rugby and the formation of ‘traditional’ maori masculinity. Sporting Traditions, 21(2), 75–95.

Hona, D. R. (2004). So what does the ordinary bloke say about his tribal masculinity? = He whakaaro a wetahi tane o te hau kainga. Thesis (MEd)—University of Auckland.

James, Bev, & Saville–Smith, Kay (1994). Gender, Culture and Power: Challenging New Zealand’s Gendered Culture. 2nd ed. Auckland: OxfordUniversity Press.

Jensen, Kai (1996). Whole Men: the Masculine Tradition in New Zealand Literature. Auckland: AucklandUniversity

King, M. (1988). One of the boys?: changing views of masculinity in New Zealand. Auckland, New Zealand: Heinemann.

Kraack, A. (1999). It Takes Two to Tango: The Place of Women in the Construction of Hegemonic Masculinity in a Student Pub. In Law, R. Campbell, H. & Dolan, J. (Eds.), Masculinities in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Palmerston North: Dunmore Press.

Latimer, B. (1998). Masculinity, place and sport: Rugby Union and the articulation of the ‘new man’ in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Thesis (MA—Geography)—University of Auckland.

Law, R. Campbell, H. & Dolan, J. (Eds.) (1999). Masculinities in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Palmerston North:Dunmore Press. Contents: I: Foundations // 1: Introduction, Robin Law, Hugh Campbell & Ruth Schick / 2: New Masculinities Theory: Poststructuralism and Beyond, Lynne Star / 3: Masculinity and A Man’s Country in 1998: An Interview with Jock Phillips, Ruth Schick with John Dolan // II: Colonial and Postcolonial Worlds / 4: A (White) Man of his Times? Sir George Grey and the Narration of Hegemonic Masculinity in Victorian New Zealand, Lawrence D. Berg / 5: Nation of Heroes, Nation of Men: Masculinity in Maurice Shadbolt’s Once on Chunuk Bair, Annabel Cooper / 6: A Context for Writing Masculinities, Donna C. Matahaere- Atariki // III: Settings and Practices / 7: Men and Machines: Manufacturing Work Sites in Mataura, South- land, Kirsten Lovelock / 8: Queer(y)ing Masculinities in Schools: Faggots, Fairies and the First XV, Shane Town / 9: It Takes Two to Tango: The Place of Women in the Construction of Hegemonic Masculinity in a Student Pub, Anna Kraack / 10: ‘What it Means to be a Man’: Hegemonic Masculinity and the Reinvention of Beer, Hugh Campbell, Robin Law & James Honeyfield // IV: Representations / 11: Advertising, Cultural Criticism and Mythologies of the Male Body, Sue Tait / 12: Heartland Wainuiomata: Rurality to Suburbs, Black Singlets to Naughty Lingerie, Robyn Longhurst & Carly Wilson / 13: ‘Blacks are Back’: Ethnicity, Male Bodies, Exhibitionary Order, Lynne Star.

Law, R., Campbell, H. and Dolan, J. (eds.) (1999) Masculinities in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Dunmore Press: Palmerston North.
Contents;
Section Two: Colonial and Postcolonial Worlds
4: A (White) Man of his Times? Sir George Grey and the Narration of Hegemonic Masculinity in Victorian New Zealand / Lawrence D. Berg.
5: Nation of Heroes, Nation of Men: Masculinity in Maurice Shadbolt’s Once on Chunuk Bair / Annabel Cooper.
6: A Context for Writing Masculinities / Donna C. Matahaere-Atariki.

Law, R.M. (1997). Masculinity, place, and beer advertising in New Zealand: the Southern Man campaign. New Zealand Geographer, 53(2), 22–28

Liepins, R. (2000). Making Men: The Construction and Representation of Agriculture–Based Masculinities in Australia and New Zealand, Rural Sociology, 63(1), 128–156.

Lovelock, K. (1999). Men and Machines: Manufacturing Work Sites in Mataura, Southland. In Law, R. Campbell, H. & Dolan, J. (Eds.), Masculinities in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Palmerston North: Dunmore Press.

MacLean, Malcolm (1999). Of warriors and blokes: the problem of Maori rugby for Pakeha masculinity in New Zealand. In Chandler, T. J. L., & Nauright, J. (Eds.). Making the rugby world: race, gender, commerce. Sport in the global society. London: F. Cass.

Markula, Pirkko & Pringle, Richard (2005). No Pain Is Sane After All: A Foucauldian Analysis of Masculinities and Men’s Experiences in Rugby. Sociology of sport journal, 22(4), 472-497.

Matahaere–Atariki, D. C. (1999). A Context for Writing Masculinities. In Law, R. Campbell, H. & Dolan, J. (Eds), Masculinities in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Palmerston North: Dunmore Press.

Morin, K., R. Longhurst, & L. Johnston (2001). (Troubling) Spaces of Mountains and Men: New Zealand’s Mount Cook and Hermitage Lodge, Social and Cultural Geography, 2(2),117–139.

O’Connell, Kieran (2004). ‘Be strong and show thyself a man’: Christian masculinities in southern Dunedin, 1885–1925. In Stenhouse, J., & Thomson, J. (Eds.). Building God’s own country: historical essays on religions in New Zealand. Dunedin, N.Z.: University of Otago Press.

Park, Julie (2000). “The worst hassle is you can’t play rugby”: Haemophilia and masculinity in New Zealand. Current Anthropology, 41(3), 443–453.

Phillips, Jock (1984). Rugby, War and the Mythology of the New Zealand Male. New Zealand Journal of History, 18(2), 83–103.

Phillips, Jock (1987). A Man’s Country? The Image of the Pakeha Male – A History. Auckland: Penguin.

Phillips, Jock. (1995). The hard man: rugby and the formation of male identity in New Zealand. In Nauright, John &Chandler, Timothy J. L. (Eds.), Making men: rugby and masculine identity. London & Portland (OR): Cass, pp. 70–90.

Pirret, J. P. (2000). Hegemonic masculinity and its effect on Maaori men’s health: a genealogical exploration of British colonialism, its disciplinary society, and the normalisation of Maaori men.Thesis (M. Leisure Studies)— University of Waikato.

Press (Jensen, K. (1993). ‘For we are natural men’: the masculine emphasis in New Zealand literature, 1930–1960. Thesis (PhD—English)—University of Auckland).

Schick, R., & Dolan, J. (1999). Masculinity and A Man’s Country in 1998: An Interview with Jock Phillips. In

Spicer, Andrew (2000). An Ambivalent Archetype: Masculinity, Performance and the New Zealand Films of Bruno Lawrence. Nottingham: Kapako Books.

Tait, S. (1999). Advertising, Cultural Criticism and Mythologies of the Male Body. In Law, R. Campbell, H. & Dolan, J. (Eds.), Masculinities in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Palmerston North: Dunmore Press.

Tengan, Ty P. Kawika (2003). (En)Gendering Colonialism: Masculinities in Hawai’i and Aotearoa. Cultural Values: Journal for Cultural Research, 6(2), 239–256.

Tomsen, Stephen (1996) Ruling Men: Comments on Masculinity and Juvenile Justice. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology, 29(2), 191–195.

Town, S. (1999). Queer(y)ing Masculinities in Schools: Faggots, Fairies and the First XV. In Law, R. Campbell, H. & Dolan, J. (Eds.), Masculinities in Aotearoa/New Zealand. Palmerston North: Dunmore Press.

Troughton, G. M. (2006). Jesus and the ideal of the manly man in New Zealand after world war one. Journal of Religious History,30(1), 45–60.

Worth, Heather, Anna Paris, and Louisa Allen. (eds.). (2002). The Life of Brian: Masculinities, Sexualities and Health in New Zealand. Dunedin: University of Otago Press.
Includes;
1. Masculinities and Globalisation / R.W. Connell.
2. Late Twentieth-Century Auckland Perspective on Samoan Masculinities / Julie Park et al.
5. I didn’t have to go to a finishing school to learn how to be gay: Maori Gay Men’s Understandings of Cultural and Sexual Identity / Clive Aspin.
7. ‘Tits is Just an Accessory’: Masculinity and Femininity in the Lives of Maori and Pacific Queens / Heather Worth.