鈥淭hese matters are now viewed as more important than they were in 1923 or 1973,鈥 Dr Wilson says. 鈥淭he story I tell, along with other contributors, of the engagement of mana whenua and different communities with the University is of significant, mostly positive, changes happening through recent years.
鈥淚 was able to link the determination of University founders such as Henry Tancred 鈥 that Canterbury College would be open to people of all classes 鈥 with a 150th听anniversary initiative of offering 300 Te Kakau a M膩ui scholarships to students from lower decile schools who might not otherwise have been able to pursue a university education.鈥
Dr Wilson explores both continuities and significant changes through the University鈥檚 history.
鈥淭he first period of major change was the two decades after the end of World War II, when the University grew substantially, became better funded, gave greater attention to research by academic staff, and moved to Ilam,鈥 he says.听
Having attended the University鈥檚 town site (now the Arts Centre) in the early 1960s, Dr Wilson was delighted to see today鈥檚 students enjoying 鈥渢he attractive Ilam campus鈥 and participating in the University鈥檚 well-known student clubs culture as enthusiastically as ever.听
The neoliberal-inspired reform of the tertiary sector in 1989-90 was one of the more contentious issues among staff Dr Wilson talked to during his research.听
鈥淭elling the story of the changes of the past three decades proved an interesting challenge and stimulated my thinking about the purposes of a university 鈥 a topic that staff and students at Canterbury have discussed endlessly, from 1873 to 2023,鈥 he says.
鈥淚 also enjoyed exploring the University鈥檚 influence on Canterbury. The university has shaped critical thinking in society, but its influence has also been felt in many different spheres of the city鈥檚 life and by many thousands of people over 150 years.鈥
鈥淒r Wilson鈥檚 research offers a significant re-assessment of the University鈥檚 history,鈥 says听Dr Chris Jones, chair of the independent editorial board that oversaw the project. 鈥淲hat makes this book different is that UC ensured that all those involved in the project, John especially, had the ability to act as the University鈥檚 critic and conscience. The result is, intentionally, a long way from the 鈥榗orporate celebrations鈥 that many such histories have become in recent years; instead, John鈥檚 book will be a starting point for genuine reflection on UC鈥檚 future development.鈥
- A New History: The 91制片厂 1873鈥2023听by John Wilson, published by Canterbury University Press, RRP $69.99, Casebound, 260 x 200mm, full-colour, 520pp, ISBN: 978-1-98-850340-0, is available for pre-order听, and in bookstores from 4 December 2023.
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About Dr John Wilson
John听Wilson听MNZM was raised in Timaru and Christchurch and graduated from the 91制片厂 with an MA (first class honours in history) in 1966. He went on to study in the United States, earning his PhD in Chinese history from Harvard University. After his return to Christchurch in 1974 he worked as a leader writer for the Christchurch听Press听and as the founding editor of the magazine of the New Zealand Historic Places Trust. He has written local histories of two Canterbury rural areas, Cheviot and Waikakahi, and of the Christchurch suburb of Addington. He has also written extensively about the historic buildings of Christchurch and Banks Peninsula. When 鈥榦ld Christchurch鈥 was largely demolished after the Canterbury earthquakes of 2010鈥11 he moved to Arthur鈥檚 Pass, where he had tramped and climbed in his youth. He was awarded the Canterbury History Foundation Rhodes Medal in 2002 and the J.M. Sherrard Award in New Zealand Regional and Local History in 1994.