Auckland University Press is delighted to
announce that Professor Tony Ballantyne is the winner of the New Zealand
History Association’s inaugural W H Oliver prize. Tony is currently Chair of
the History Department at the University of Otago and Director of the
university’s Centre for Research on Colonial Culture.
The
judges described Entanglements of Empire
as “an elegant and sophisticated work, which takes New Zealand historical
scholarship to a new level of analysis and interpretation.
Entanglements of Empire is one of the standout texts in this year’s entries and represents an important contribution to the historiography of empires and the new imperial history”.
Tony Ballantyne commented: ‘I am delighted to receive this prize for Entanglements of Empire and I am very sorry that I could not be in Christchurch to receive it in person. I am thrilled to receive this award from the NZHA and am particularly delighted that the award marks the profound disciplinary contribution of the late Bill Oliver. I would like to acknowledge the hard work of the team at Duke University Press, especially my editor Miriam Angress, and also Sam Elworthy’s team at Auckland University Press. I would also like to acknowledge my colleagues at Otago, both in the Department of History and Art History and the Centre for Research on Colonial Culture, who my share my deep commitment to thinking through the history of our islands and their changing place in the world.’
Entanglements of Empire is one of the standout texts in this year’s entries and represents an important contribution to the historiography of empires and the new imperial history”.
Tony Ballantyne commented: ‘I am delighted to receive this prize for Entanglements of Empire and I am very sorry that I could not be in Christchurch to receive it in person. I am thrilled to receive this award from the NZHA and am particularly delighted that the award marks the profound disciplinary contribution of the late Bill Oliver. I would like to acknowledge the hard work of the team at Duke University Press, especially my editor Miriam Angress, and also Sam Elworthy’s team at Auckland University Press. I would also like to acknowledge my colleagues at Otago, both in the Department of History and Art History and the Centre for Research on Colonial Culture, who my share my deep commitment to thinking through the history of our islands and their changing place in the world.’
AUP’s
director Sam Elworthy said: “W. H. Oliver was a deep thinker about New Zealand
and our place in the world: Tony Ballantyne shares those same qualities. So
we’re thrilled to have copublished Tony’s ENTANGLEMENTS OF EMPIRE with Duke
University Press, for the book to have won the inaugural W. H. Oliver Award,
and to be longlisted for the Ockham New Zealand Book Awards.”
For further information contact:
Margaret
Samuels, Auckland
University Press
m.samuels@auckland.ac.nz
m.samuels@auckland.ac.nz
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