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Nadine Gordimer Revisited
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ISBN: 0805746080 0805718834 9780805746082 Year: 1999 Publisher: Gale

Gender, race, and the writing of empire : public discourse and the Boer War
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ISBN: 0511149654 0511323158 0511484852 0511048394 0511117817 1280153873 0521653223 9780521607728 9780521653220 9780511484858 1107117666 0511033168 9780511033162 0511006993 9780511006999 9780511117817 0521607728 9780511048395 9781107117662 9780511149658 9780511323157 9781280153877 Year: 1999 Volume: 23 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

All of London exploded on the night of May 18, 1900, in the biggest West End party ever seen. The mix of media manipulation, patriotism, and class, race, and gender politics that produced the 'spontaneous' festivities of Mafeking Night begins this analysis of the cultural politics of late-Victorian imperialism. Paula M. Krebs examines 'the last of the gentlemen's wars' - the Boer War of 1899-1902 - and the struggles to maintain an imperialist hegemony in a twentieth-century world, through the war writings of Arthur Conan Doyle, Olive Schreiner, H. Rider Haggard, and Rudyard Kipling, as well as contemporary journalism, propaganda, and other forms of public discourse. Her feminist analysis of such matters as the sexual honor of the British soldier at war, the deaths of thousands of women and children in 'concentration camps', and new concepts of race in South Africa marks this book as a significant contribution to British imperial studies.

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