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Thesis Eleven, Vol. 92, No. 1, 87-107 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/0725513607085046
© 2008 Thesis Eleven Pty, Ltd., SAGE Publications

Post-War New Zealand Literary Critique

James Smithies

NZ-Australia Connections (NZAC) Research Centre, University of Canterbury, New Zealand, james.smithies{at}canterbury.ac.nz

For most of the 20th century literature and criticism of literature functioned as central engines of cultural change across the western world. This was especially the case in ex-colonial societies like New Zealand where writers and intellectuals frequently expressed a desire to create sophisticated local cultures which could compete with the foundation societies in Europe. Between 1940 and 1984 New Zealand writers and intellectuals developed a mode of literary criticism which this essay refers to as `Literary Critique' for this very reason. In the absence of well established cultural traditions and a sense that they had a duty to import and indigenise western intellectual thought in order to further the evolution of New Zealand culture, a series of writers wrote often scathing critiques of their culture, using literature as their point of entry. Post-War New Zealand Literary Critique stands as evidence of a provincial, masculine, and angry intellectual culture.

Key Words: critique • culture • literature • masculinism • modernism • New Zealand • post-modern


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