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Cover of Women's History Review

Women's History Review

Volume 9, Issue 3, Sep 2000
Pages 585-606

  • DOI: 10.1080/09612020000200255
  • Print ISSN: 0961-2025
  • Online ISSN: 1747-583X

‘Fresh attractions’: white slaveryand feminism in New Zealand, 1885–1918

Department of Internal Affairs

Abstract

New Zealand women participated in an international debate over white slavery from the late nineteenth century. Features of that debate were common to several countries, but local commentators drew upon New Zealand's colonial position to evoke images of old-world ills in a new country. Ironically, however, New Zealand women were not convinced of the existence of white slavery in their country. As part of a catalogue of men's sexual and social oppression of women, the portrayal of gender relations in the anti-white slavery campaign was stark, but deliberate. In their demands that men take responsibility for ensuring that women had the right to walk the streets in safety, New Zealand feminists deployed the rhetoric of white slavery to argue for women's sexual and social freedom.