Olive Schreiner (1855 - 1920)

Daughter of a German missionary father and British mother, Olive Schreiner was born on the border of the Cape Colony in South Africa in 1855 where, apart from some time in London in the 1880s and the early twentieth century, she resided until she died in 1920. The cross-national nature of her parents' identities is indicative of her own later embroilment in the politics of nationality, identity, religion and race in Southern Africa, issues with which she grappled ferociously throughout her lifetime. She thought of herself as South African - as opposed to English, German or even Dutch (the Dutch Boers were a central part of her African experience and they are recurring concern of both her fiction and non-fictional writings) - at a time when tumultuous events, from brutal wars to swift economic industrialization, were contributing to the formation of the nation. Read more.

Professor Elleke Boehmer gives a talk on Olive Schreiner (1855-1920), the South African novelist...

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Dominic Davies talks about Olive Schreiner, the postcolonial South African author, and how her...

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Professor Elleke Boehmer gives a talk on Olive Schreiner (1855-1920), the South African novelist...

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A new ed. in which is included, The dawn of civilization (her last words, in 1920).
London...

Author:
Olive Schreiner
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Bodleian Libraries

London : T. Fisher Unwin

Author:
Olive Schreiner
Sourced from :
Bodleian Libraries
Author:
Olive Schreiner
Sourced from :
Marxists Internet Archive

Includes: Thoughts on South Africa [1923], Stories, Dreams and Allegories [1923], The Letters of...

Author:
Olive Schreiner
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eBooks@Adelaide
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