Beyond Gold and Diamonds

Genre, the Authorial Informant, and the British South African Novel

By Melissa Free

Subjects: Nineteenth-century Studies, Literary Criticism, Postcolonial Studies, Gender Studies, Women's Studies
Series: SUNY series, Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Paperback : 9781438481524, 288 pages, July 2021
Hardcover : 9781438481531, 288 pages, March 2021

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Table of contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
A Note on Terminology

Introduction: A Single Frame: Southern Africa, Britain, and the Authorial Informant

1. Preterdomesticity and the South African Farm: Women Old and New

2. "It Is I Who Have the Power": The Female Colonial Romance

3. Colony of Dreadful Delight: Gertrude Page and the Rhodesian Settler Romance

4. "There Will Be No More Kings in Africa": Foreclosing Darkness in Prester John

Epilogue: Beyond the British South African Novel

Notes
Works Cited
Index

The first book to examine and establish characteristics of the British South African novel.

Description

Beyond Gold and Diamonds demonstrates the importance of southern Africa to British literature from the 1880s to the 1920s, from the rise of the systematic exploitation of the region's mineral wealth to the aftermath of World War I. It focuses on fiction by the colonial-born Olive Schreiner, southern Africa's first literary celebrity, as well as by H. Rider Haggard, Gertrude Page, and John Buchan, its most influential authorial informants, British authors who spent significant time in the region and wrote about it as insiders. Tracing the ways in which generic innovation enabled these writers to negotiate cultural and political concerns through a uniquely British South African lens, Melissa Free argues that British South African literature constitutes a distinct field, one that overlaps with but also exists apart from both a national South African literary tradition and a tradition of South African literature in English. The various genres that British South African novelists introduced—the New Woman novel, the female colonial romance, the Rhodesian settler romance, and the modern spy thriller—anticipated metropolitan literary developments while consolidating Britain's sense of its own dominion in a time of increasing opposition.

Melissa Free is Assistant Professor of English at Arizona State University.

Reviews

"This deeply researched, lively history of how southern Africa and Britain came to be understood as a multidirectional imperial landscape is the first of its kind. Melissa Free gives us a persuasive account of the novels that conjured British South Africa in the modern imperial imagination—and of the authors whose lived experience of the place made them not simply experts, but uniquely colonial informants as well. Beyond Gold and Diamonds is postcolonial literary history at its best." — Antoinette Burton, author of The Trouble with Empire: Challenges to Modern British Imperialism