Katie Pickles
Katie Pickles | |
---|---|
Academic background | |
Alma mater | McGill University |
Thesis | |
Doctoral advisor | Audrey Kobayashi |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Postcolonial and feminist history |
Institutions | University of Canterbury |
Doctoral students | Megan Woods |
Catherine Gillian Pickles is a New Zealand history academic, and as of 2019 is a full professor at the University of Canterbury.[1]
Academic career[]
After an undergraduate at the University of Canterbury (where she edited the student paper Canta) and University of British Columbia,[2] Pickles completed a 1996 PhD titled 'Representing twentieth century Canadian colonial identity : the Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire (IODE)' at McGill University. Pickles returned to the University of Canterbury, rising to full professor.[1]
Much of Pickles' work is influenced by postcolonial and feminist approaches.[1][3][4][5][6][7]
Selected works[]
- Pickles, Katie. "Female imperialism and national identity." (2018).
- Pickles, Katie. Transnational outrage: The death and commemoration of Edith Cavell. Springer, 2016.
- Rutherdale, Myra, and Katie Pickles, eds. Contact zones: Aboriginal and settler women in Canada's colonial past. UBC Press, 2014.
- Pickles, Katie. "A link in ‘the great chain of Empire friendship’: the Victoria League in New Zealand." The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 33, no. 1 (2005): 29-50.
- Pickles, Katie. "Colonial counterparts: the first academic women in Anglo-Canada, New Zealand and Australia." Women's History Review 10, no. 2 (2001): 273-298.
- Pickles, Katie. "Kiwi Icons and the Re‐Settlement of New Zealand 1 as Colonial Space." New Zealand Geographer 58, no. 2 (2002): 5-16.
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "UC Research Profile - University of Canterbury - New Zealand". researchprofile.canterbury.ac.nz. Retrieved 5 April 2019.
- ^ "Katie Pickles - BWB Bridget Williams Books". www.bwb.co.nz.
- ^ Pickles, Katie. "Why New Zealand was the first country where women won the right to vote". The Conversation.
- ^ "Katie Pickles - Ruptured Christchurch". Radio New Zealand. 13 March 2016.
- ^ "Rebuild Christ Church Cathedral as an interfaith hub". Stuff.
- ^ "Royal Society Te Apārangi - Katie Pickles". royalsociety.org.nz.
- ^ NZHeh (16 November 2017). "Congratulations Katie Pickles, James Cook Research Fellowship". The New Zealand Historical Association.
External links[]
Categories:
- Living people
- New Zealand women academics
- New Zealand historians
- University of Canterbury alumni
- University of Canterbury faculty
- Feminist historians
- 21st-century New Zealand women writers
- 21st-century historians
- New Zealand feminists
- New Zealand academic biography stubs