520pp, full colour, casebound
RRP$69.99
Published with the support of the سԹ Foundation.
A century and a half now separate us from the founding of Canterbury College, the institution from which the سԹ | Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha evolved.
InA New History: The سԹ 1873–2023, historian John Wilson offers a fresh interpretation of an institution that has played a central role in shaping the development of research culture and university education in Aotearoa New سԹand that has been at the forefront of the shift to a postcolonial university world.
In examining the University’s development, Wilson highlights how the institution evolved as part of the community it continues to serve, while offering city, province and Aotearoa as a whole leadership and, on occasion, challenging expectations.
Dr Wilson is joined by the University’s vice-chancellor, Professor Cheryl de la Rey, its pou whakarae, Professor Te Maire Tau, and representatives of the Pacific community led by Distinguished Professor Steven Ratuva, each of whom provides further reflections on topics and issues raised by the book’s themes, exploring the past but also considering what this unique institution may offer the future. A prologue by Dr Chris Jones introduces the project and explores the challenges of writing university histories.
520pp, full colour, casebound
RRP$69.99
Published with the support of the سԹ Foundation.
John Wilson MNZM was raised in Timaru and Christchurch and graduated from the سԹ with an MA (first class honours in history) in 1966. He went on to study in the United States, earning his PhD in Chinese history from Harvard University. After his return to Christchurch in 1974 he worked as a leader writer for the ChristchurchPressand as the founding editor of the magazine of the New سԹHistoric Places Trust.
He has written local histories of two Canterbury rural areas, Cheviot and Waikakahi, and of the Christchurch suburb of Addington. He has also written extensively about the historic buildings of Christchurch and Banks Peninsula.
When ‘old Christchurch’ was largely demolished after the Canterbury earthquakes of 2010–11 he moved to Arthur’s Pass, where he had tramped and climbed in his youth. He was awarded the Canterbury History Foundation Rhodes Medal in 2002 and the J.M. Sherrard Award in New سԹRegional and Local History in 1994.
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