Washday at the Pa

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Washday at the Pa is an illustrated children's book by photographer Ans Westra, first published in 1964, that describes a day in the lives of a rural Māori family.

The book was originally published by the then School Publications Branch of the Department of Education, and printed by the , but all 38,000 copies were withdrawn[1] following a campaign by the Māori Women's Welfare League that it would have a 'detrimental effect' on Māori people – and that the living conditions portrayed within the book were atypical. Before it was published editors James K. Baxter and Alistair Campbell of the School Publications expressed 'doubts about the acceptability of the photographs to Māori,' but the book was published anyway.[2] The subsequent August 1964 order by the Minister of Education caused a controversy[3] and all copies in schools were recalled and shredded, as were all unsold copies in the Government Bookshops chain.

Westra had the book republished the next year by Caxton Press of Christchurch.[3]

A new edition with photographs taken of the same family in 1998 was published by Ans Westra and Mark Amery in 2011.[4]

Publications[]

  • Washday at the Pa by Ans Westra (Caxton Press, 1964), in particular the enclosed publisher's note.
  • Washday at the Pa by Ans Westra (Government Printer, 1964).
  • Washday at the Pa by Ans Westra and ({Suite}) ISBN 978-0-473-19846-6

References[]

  1. ^ Knowledge Net article Te Papa
  2. ^ Stewart, Georgina; Dale, Hēmi (2018-02-26). "Reading the 'ghost book': Māori talk about Washday at the Pā, by Ans Westra". Video Journal of Education and Pedagogy. 3 (1): 2. doi:10.1186/s40990-018-0014-2. hdl:10292/12833. ISSN 2364-4583.
  3. ^ a b "Te Ao Hou, No 50 (March 1965)". National Library of New Zealand. Retrieved 7 June 2014.
  4. ^ Suite Gallery (2011). "Ans Westra's "Washday At The Pa" Republished". scoop.co.nz. Retrieved 19 October 2011.
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