This study constitutes an inquiry into how Olive Schreiner‟s peripheral position as a colonial woman writer enabled her rewriting of feminine identity, specifically her subversion of Victorian feminine stereotypes. I focus particular attention on three novels: The Story of an African Farm (1890), and the posthumously published From Man to Man (1926) and Undine (1929). I employ a feminist literary approach to examine how Schreiner‟s hybrid identity as a British South African enabled her revisioning of femininity. If Schreiner is situated within the context of her time, it can be demonstrated that her negotiations of feminine identity are influenced by her dual intellectual and cultural heritage. On the one hand, she can be situated within a ...
Olive Schreiner, writing in the tradition of George Eliot and the Brontës, was an isolated yet origi...
M.A. (English)The fallen woman is the central figure in much of the fiction written in Britain durin...
In her 1925 review of an edited collection of Olive Schreiner’s letters, Virginia Woolf described Sc...
This study constitutes an inquiry into how Olive Schreiner‟s peripheral position as a colonial woman...
In this paper I discuss the relation between Olive Schreiner's social context and the form of her fi...
This study investigates a thus far neglected aspect of Olive Schreiner’s feminism, namely her subver...
Bibliography: pages 102-112.This dissertation locates Olive Schreiner as a nineteenth-century coloni...
2010 Summer.Includes bibliographic references.Covers not scanned.Print version deaccessioned 2022.In...
Includes bibliography.White South African author Olive Schreiner (1855-1920) and African American au...
Olive Schreiner was the first \u27modern\u27 colonial writer from South Africa, and one of the most ...
There are disturbances as well as regularities in the gender order, including challenges to and re-w...
The nature of the relationship between (proto-)feminism and (anti-)imperialism is highly contested. ...
Olive Schreiner’s The Story of an African Farm is often noted as “the first New Woman novel” for its...
Olive Schreiner is perhaps best remembered for, and was in her own lifetime most famous as the autho...
Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2011.The 'colony' in Olive Schreiner‟s fiction an...
Olive Schreiner, writing in the tradition of George Eliot and the Brontës, was an isolated yet origi...
M.A. (English)The fallen woman is the central figure in much of the fiction written in Britain durin...
In her 1925 review of an edited collection of Olive Schreiner’s letters, Virginia Woolf described Sc...
This study constitutes an inquiry into how Olive Schreiner‟s peripheral position as a colonial woman...
In this paper I discuss the relation between Olive Schreiner's social context and the form of her fi...
This study investigates a thus far neglected aspect of Olive Schreiner’s feminism, namely her subver...
Bibliography: pages 102-112.This dissertation locates Olive Schreiner as a nineteenth-century coloni...
2010 Summer.Includes bibliographic references.Covers not scanned.Print version deaccessioned 2022.In...
Includes bibliography.White South African author Olive Schreiner (1855-1920) and African American au...
Olive Schreiner was the first \u27modern\u27 colonial writer from South Africa, and one of the most ...
There are disturbances as well as regularities in the gender order, including challenges to and re-w...
The nature of the relationship between (proto-)feminism and (anti-)imperialism is highly contested. ...
Olive Schreiner’s The Story of an African Farm is often noted as “the first New Woman novel” for its...
Olive Schreiner is perhaps best remembered for, and was in her own lifetime most famous as the autho...
Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2011.The 'colony' in Olive Schreiner‟s fiction an...
Olive Schreiner, writing in the tradition of George Eliot and the Brontës, was an isolated yet origi...
M.A. (English)The fallen woman is the central figure in much of the fiction written in Britain durin...
In her 1925 review of an edited collection of Olive Schreiner’s letters, Virginia Woolf described Sc...