Kōtare 2000, Volume Three, Number One
Contents
- Two unrelated changes in the English of young New Zealanders — by Winifred Bauer, Laurie Bauer
- Seeing the light of day: J.H.E. Schroder’s broadcast review of Day and Night — by Charlotte Elder
- Censorship, subversion and short fiction in 1940 — by Stephen Hamilton
- The Tasman Sea – common ground that keeps us apart — by Mark Edgecombe
- The Puritan Paradox: An Annotated Bibliography of Puritan and Anti-Puritan New Zealand Fiction, 1860-1940 — Part 1: The Puritan Legacy — by Kirstine Moffat
- Did Cresswell’s ‘Stream’ ever run? — by John Lee
- Review Article: Antipodean postcoloniality, mosaic style — by Simone Drichel
- Unofficial Channels: Letters Between Alister McIntosh and Foss Shanahan, George Laking and Frank Corner 1946–1966 — by Damien Fenton
- Long Journey for Sevenpence: Assisted Immigration to New Zealand from the United Kingdom 1947–1975 — by A.J. Coleman
- The State in New Zealand, 1840-1984. Socialism Without Doctrines? — by John E. Martin
- Out of the Shadow of War: The German Connection with New Zealand in the Twentieth Century — by A.J. Coleman

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