Historian shines a light on 1820s New Zealand
**MEDIA RELEASE**
Historian Paul
Moon, well-known for exploring controversial subjects,
shines a light on 1820s New Zealand.
New Zealand in the 1820s was a stark and vastly
different place and it was the rapid change during this era
that influenced the future of the nation for the remainder
of the century. In his new book, A Savage Country: The
Untold Story of New Zealand in the 1820s, Paul Moon gives a
lively revisionist history.
Paul is
well-known for exploring controversial subjects (e.g. his
bestselling book on cannibalism in New Zealand, This Horrid
Practice) and in A Savage Country, Paul once again looks
into a variety of controversial subjects, namely a look into
the shrunken Maori heads trade. This trade, mainly to
Sydney, saw tattooed Maori shrunken heads (severed and
specially prepared) sell for high value overseas. This trade
was extremely lucrative and saw slaves in particular be
killed and tattooed for this purpose. Bodies were even
killed and tattooed after death and then transported. The
Musket Wars had New Zealand divided and the mercurial need
to have weapons saw tribes partake in difficult acts. Paul
also explores New Zealand’s occurrences of child
prostitution, Hongi Hika’s revised success as a leader,
along with a history of church missionaries and their very
debatable success in this era.
New
Zealand in the 1820s had no government or bureaucratic
presence; no newspapers were published; the literate
population was probably no more than a few dozen people at
any one time. Early explorers’ assessments of New Zealand
were haphazard at best – few knew what to make of this
foreign land and its people.
Paul Moon
details how so many of the events in this decade – the
introduction of aggressive capitalism, the arrival of
literacy and the beginnings of Maori print culture,
intertribal warfare, colonisation as a simultaneously
destructive and beneficial force – influenced the
nation’s evolution over the remainder of the
century.
A Savage Country leaves no
stone unturned in an examination of this dynamic and
fascinating pre-Treaty era.
Dr
Paul Moon is Professor of History at the Faculty of Maori
Development, Auckland University of Technology (AUT
University), where he has taught since 1993. He has a
Bachelor of Arts degree, a Master of Philosophy degree, a
Master of Arts degree, and a Doctor of Philosophy. In 2003,
he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society at
University College, London. Paul is widely recognised for
his study of the Treaty of Waitangi. As well as his many
books on the subject, he has produced major biographies of
political and Maori figures, an examination of Maori
cannibalism and a general history of New Zealand in the
twentieth century. Paul is appearing at the Auckland Writers
and Readers Festival 2012.
A Savage
Country: The Untold Story of New Zealand in the 1820s has
just been released in New Zealand.
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