O'Malley and SInclair

Vincent O’Malley’s work on the New Zealand Wars and especially the Waikato Wars is formative to my understanding of the context that led to the aukati and the deep suspicion that the Kīngitanga had toward the government. The sense of betrayal and injustice along with the material suffering of the Kīngitanga shaped the way they related to the authorities. Their desire for restoration of confiscated lands became an impassable barrier to negotiations for a peaceful settlement, which Michael Belgrave* illuminates. I am aware that O’Malley’s work tends toward polemic as he seeks to show the dark side of our history and legitimate Māori claims for recognition and compensation. Nonetheless, his work is an essential corrective to the earlier histories that focused on the advancement of civilization, the betterment of the Māori race and New Zealand’s superior race relations record. My work will interact with this broader sweep of historiography and offer insights from microhistories that w...