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The classical-historical novel in nineteenth-century BritainWalker, Stanwood Sterling 11 April 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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The contextual compass : a literary-historical study of three British women’s travel writing on Africa, 1797 – 1934Visser, Liezel 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (English Studies))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Texts by women travellers describing their journeys date back almost as far as
those produced by their male counterparts, yet women’s travel writing has only
become an area of academic interest during the past ten to fifteen years.
Previously, women’s travel writing was mostly read for its entertainment value
rather than its academic merit and – as Sara Mills notes in her Discourses of
Difference – appeared almost exclusively in the form of coffee table books or
biographies offering romanticized accounts of heroic, eccentric women who
undertook epic journeys to Africa (4). The growing interest in women’s travel
writing as part of colonial discourse coincides with the emergence of gender
studies and related subjects. The emergence of these areas of academic enquiry
can be attributed to the systematic dismantling of the patriarchal structures,
which previously dominated social and academic domains.
The aim of this study is to examine European women’s travel writing as a
subversive discourse which, while sharing some characteristics with traditional
male-produced travel texts from the colonial era, was informed by the discursive
constraints of femininity. These texts thus differ from male-produced texts in
the sense that, because of the different discursive constraints informing women’s
travel writing, they offer commentary on aspects of Africa and its peoples which
men had omitted in their travel accounts. Three specific texts by British women
who recorded their travels in Africa form the basis of the discussion in this
dissertation: the travel writing of Lady Anne Barnard (South African Cape Colony,
1797 – 1801), Mary Kingsley (West Africa: Gabon and the Congo, 1896 – 1900)
and Barbara Greene (Liberia, 1935). Since, as Mills argues, “feminist textual
theory has restricted itself to the analysis of literary texts and has been
concerned with analysis of the text itself” (12), which limits the extent to which
one can provide interesting, discerning, and relevant comment on women’s
writing, the readings of these texts are not limited to feminist theory of women’s
travel writing.
Social expectations until as recently as the early twentieth century located
women firmly in the domestic sphere. It was almost unthinkable for women to
undertake travels other than the traditional Grand Tour. To attempt to venture
into the predominantly male territory of travel writing was to expose oneself to
harsh criticism and to risk being labelled as eccentric and unfeminine. Thus
women had to find a way of making both their travels and writing seem
acceptable by social standards, while still presenting as true as possible a picture
of Africa in their writing. These constraints of the discourse of femininity on their
texts necessarily make women’s writing seem concerned almost exclusively with
matters of feminine interest. Mills attributes this to women travel writers’
“problematic status, caught between the conflicting demands of the discourse of
femininity and that of imperialism.” (Mills, Discourses of Difference 22) / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Reisbeskrywings deur vroue dateer byna so ver terug as dié wat deur mans
geskryf is. Tog het vroue se reisbeskrywings eers in die afgelope tien tot vyftien
jaar akademiese belangstelling begin ontlok. Voorheen is vroue se
reisbeskrywings meestal vir vermaak eerder as akademiese meriete gelees, en –
soos Sara Mills in haar Discourses of Difference opmerk – het dit byna uitsluitlik
verskyn as koffietafelboeke of verromantiseerde biografieë van heldhaftige,
sonderlinge vroue wat epiese reise na Afrika onderneem het (4).
Die toenemende belangstelling in vroue se reisbeskrywings as deel van koloniale
diskoers val saam met die verskyning van gender-studies en verwante
vakgebiede. Die ontstaan van hierdie akademiese vakgebiede kan toegeskryf
word aan die stelselmatige aftakeling van die paternalistiese strukture wat
sosiale en akademiese arenas voorheen oorheers het.
Die doel van hierdie studie is om Europese vroue se reisbeskrywings te
ondersoek as ‘n ondermynende diskoers wat, hoewel dit sekere eienskappe van
tradisionele reisbeskrywings deur manlike skrywers uit die koloniale tydperk
toon, gegrond is in die beperkende diskoers van vroulikheid. Hierdie tekste
verskil dus van tekste deur manlike skrywers in die opsig dat dit, as gevolg van
die verskillende diskoersbeperkinge waarin dit gegrond is, kommentaar lewer op
aspekte van Afrika en sy bevolking wat mans in hul reisbeskrywings uitgelaat
het. Drie spesifieke tekste deur Britse vroue wat hul reise beskryf het vorm die
grondslag van hierdie verhandeling; dit is die reisbeskrywings van Lady Anne
Barnard (Suid-Afrikaanse Kaapkolonie, 1797 – 1801), Mary Kingsley (Wes-
Afrika: Gaboen en die Kongo, 1896 – 1900) en Barbara Greene (Liberië, 1935).
Mills voer aan: “Feminist textual theory has restricted itself to the analysis of
literary texts and has been concerned with analysis of the text itself” (12). Dít
beperk die mate waartoe interessante, skerpsinnige en toepaslike kommentaar
oor vroue se reisbeskrywings gelewer kan word; dus is die interpretasie van
hierdie tekste nie beperk tot feministiese teorie met betrekking tot vrouereisbeskrywings
nie.
Tot so onlangs as die vroeë twintigste eeu het die samelewing se verwagtinge
vroue streng tot die huishoudelike sfeer beperk. Afgesien van die tradisionele
Grand Tour was dit bykans ondenkbaar vir vroue om te reis. As ‘n vrou inbreuk
sou probeer maak op die tradisioneel manlike gebied van die skryfkuns sou sy
haarself blootstel aan skerp kritiek en onwenslike etikettering as eksentriek en
onvroulik. Dus moes vroue ‘n manier vind om sowel hul reise as hul skryfwerk
sosiaal aanvaarbaar te maak en terselfdertyd so ‘n egte beeld as moontlik van
Afrika te skets in hul skryfwerk. Die beperkinge wat die diskoers van vroulikheid
op hul tekste plaas, lei noodwendig daartoe dat vroue se skryfwerk as byna
geheel en al beperk tot sake van vroulike belang voorkom. Mills skryf dít toe aan
vroue-reisbeskrywers se “problematic status, caught between the conflicting
demands of the discourse of femininity and that of imperialism.” (Mills,
Discourses of Difference 22)
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Unfinished, Unloved, UNKRA: The Formation, Life, and Financial Enervation of the United Nations Korean Reconstruction Agency (1950-1954)McMahon, Ryan P. 27 October 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Travelling objects : modernity and materiality in British Colonial travel literature about AfricaHållen, Nicklas January 2011 (has links)
This study examines the functions of objects in a selection of British colonial travel accounts about Africa. The works discussed were published between 1863 and 1908 and include travelogues by John Hanning Speke, Verney Lovett Cameron, Henry Morton Stanley, Mary Henrietta Kingsley, Ewart Scott Grogan, Mary Hall and Constance Larymore. The author argues that objects are deeply involved in the construction of pre-modern and modern spheres that the travelling subject moves between. The objects in the travel accounts are studied in relation to a contextual background of Victorian commodity and object culture, epitomised by the 1851 Great Exhibition and the birth of the modern anthropological museum. The four analysis chapters investigate the roles of objects in ethnographical and geographical writing, in ideological discussions about the transformative powers of colonial trade, and in narratives about the arrival of the book in the colonial periphery. As the analysis shows, however, objects tend not to behave as they are expected to do. Instead of marking temporal differences, descriptions of objects are typically unstable and riddled with contradictions and foreground the ambivalence that characterises colonial literature.
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Hidden histories and multiple meanings : the Richard Dennett collection at the Royal Albert Memorial Museum, ExeterAyres, Sara Craig January 2012 (has links)
Ethnographic collections in western museums such as the Royal Albert Memorial Museum (RAMM) carry many meanings, but by definition, they represent an intercultural encounter. This history of this encounter is often lost, overlooked, or obscured, and yet it has bearing on how the objects in the collection have been interpreted and understood. This thesis uncovers the hidden history of one particular collection in the RAMM and examines the multiple meanings that have been attributed to the objects in the collection over time. The Richard Dennett Collection was made in Africa in the years when European powers began to colonise the Congo basin. Richard Edward Dennett (1857-1921) worked as a trader in the Lower Congo between 1879 and 1902. The collection was accessioned by the RAMM in 1889. The research contextualises the collection by making a close analysis of primary source material which was produced by the collector and by his contemporaries, and includes publications, correspondence, photographs and illustrations which have been studied in museums and archives in Europe and North America. Dennett was personally involved with key events in the colonial history of this part of Africa but he also studied the indigenous BaKongo community, recording his observations about their political and material culture. As a result he became involved in the institutions of anthropology and folklore in Britain which were attempting to explain, classify and interpret such cultures. Through examining Dennett’s history this research has been able to explore the Congo context, the indigenous society, and those European institutions which collected and interpreted BaKongo collections. The research has added considerably to the museum’s knowledge about this collection and its collector, and the study responds to the practical imperative implicit in a Collaborative Doctoral Project, by proposing a small temporary exhibition in the RAMM to explore these histories and meanings. In making this proposal the research considers the current curatorial debate concerning responsible approaches to colonial collections, and assesses some of the strategies that are being employed in museums today.
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