Summary: | In the period 1906-1925, several women's organisations offered an interpretation of
political life that emphasised the role of women as maternal citizens and saviours of the
"race". Through an examination of the activities of eight women's organisations, it is
argued that women were active participants in the construction of the New Zealand
nation. By abandoning traditional androcentric definitions of the "political", it is
demonstrated how women during this period worked to extend the "private" sphere of
the home into the community, and ultimately the nation. As social purists, war time
voluntary workers, instructors of young women, and as mothers, New Zealand women
were crucial to constructed national identities. Through emphasising traditional
maternal functions, such as care and nurture, women could, and did, negotiate a place
for themselves in the New Zealand nation.
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