Not to exact a full look at the worst : (mis)representations of state-sanctioned violence in New Zealand poetry : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English at Massey University, Manawatu, New Zealand

dc.confidentialEmbargo : No
dc.contributor.advisorSteer, Philip
dc.contributor.authorMcLean, Robert
dc.date.accessioned2025-11-26T02:16:21Z
dc.date.issued2025-11-26
dc.description.abstractThis thesis examines how local poetry written between the First World War and the early twenty-first century has represented state-sanctioned violence done in Aotearoa New Zealand and on the state’s behalf overseas. Although this period is marked by the emergence and consolidation of a distinct New Zealand literature and the New Zealand state’s deliberate involvement in major overseas conflicts, surprisingly few poems directly represent such violence. This thesis identifies and analyses poems written in English by Māori, Pacific, and Pākehā poets that do represent state-sanctioned violence: Donald H. Lea’s “Gold Stripe” from Stand Down! (1917); Allen Curnow’s Island and Time (1941); Kendrick Smithyman’s “Vignettes of the Māori Wars” from Flying to Palmerston (1968); Māori Battalion: A Poetic Sequence (2001) by Alistair Te Ariki Campbell; and Captain Cook in the Underworld (2002) by Robert Sullivan. I use a form of mimetic close reading to examine their sources, spatial and temporal renderings, attribution of agency, prosody and modes of representation, construal of legitimacy, and violence’s uses and effects. I determine how poetry’s conventions, licenses, limitations, and omissions have helped or hindered naming, understanding, and owning Aotearoa New Zealand’s state-sanctioned violence in these five poetic works. The evidence from this poetic archive testifies to a radical disjunction between state-sanctioned violence’s historical realities and how these examples of New Zealand poetry have represented of it. They have largely failed to give voice to what poet Geoffrey Hill called “the world’s real cries” by refusing to address directly the social, political, and legal sources of state-sanctioned violence’s meaningfulness and legitimisation.
dc.identifier.urihttps://mro.massey.ac.nz/handle/10179/73856
dc.publisherMassey University
dc.rights© The Author
dc.subjectCurnow, Allen, 1911-2001
dc.subjectSullivan, Robert, 1967
dc.subjectSmithyman, Kendrick
dc.subjectCampbell, Alistair, 1925-2009
dc.subjectCriticism and interpretation
dc.subjectNew Zealand poetry
dc.subjectHistory and criticism
dc.subject20th century
dc.subjectLiterature and state
dc.subjectNew Zealand
dc.subjectState-sponsored terrorism
dc.subjectViolence in literature
dc.subjectWar in literature
dc.subjectTrauma
dc.subjectTuhinga auaha
dc.subjectKāwanatanga
dc.subjectTūkinotanga
dc.subjectNgā hara a Riri
dc.subject.anzsrc470522 New Zealand literature (excl. Māori literature)
dc.titleNot to exact a full look at the worst : (mis)representations of state-sanctioned violence in New Zealand poetry : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English at Massey University, Manawatu, New Zealand
thesis.degree.disciplineEnglish
thesis.degree.nameDoctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)
thesis.description.doctoral-citation-abridgedMr McLean used close-reading to explore how New Zealand poetry represents, Aotearoa New Zealand’s state-sanctioned violence. Exploring historical knowledge and public speech as well as modernist poetics, Mr McLean questions what kind of poems would make worthy mimetic memories and memorials for New Zealand, which continues to be reticent, apologetic, and dismissive about its violent past, present, and future.
thesis.description.doctoral-citation-longGovernments have used state-sanctioned violence throughout New Zealand's history. Mr McLean used close-reading to explore how New Zealand poetry’s conventions, licenses, limitations, and omissions have helped or hindered representing, naming, understanding, and owning Aotearoa New Zealand’s state-sanctioned violence. Mr Mclean examined the texts' sources, poetic contextualisation, prosody, agency, representation, and violence’s legitimacy and purpose. Exploring historical knowledge and public speech as well as modernist poetics, Mr McLean questions what kind of poems would make worthy mimetic memories and memorials for New Zealand, which continues to be reticent, apologetic, and dismissive about its violent past, present, and future.
thesis.description.name-pronounciationRO BERT MC LEAN

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