Schreiner criticism over the last two decades or so has shown greater interest in her ideas than in her literary imagination. Without setting up ‘silos’ of approach – thought and imagination, after all, are inextricably bound – I revisit the power of the literary imagination in the works of both Olive Schreiner and Douglas Blackburn against a context of contemporaneous ‘colonial fiction’: that is, against a context that accentuates, in contrast, the substance and seriousness of the two novelists on whom I focus. Can these two novelists be seen to chart a shift from the story of a colony to a ‘South African’ story? We may conclude, in any case, that between them Schreiner and Blackburn revisioned the colonial novel Keywords: Schreiner, Black...
Many writers, some of whom have much more established literaryreputations than Blackburn, have been ...
Thesis (M.A. (English))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2005The farm in South Africa i...
This study constitutes an inquiry into how Olive Schreiner‟s peripheral position as a colonial woman...
Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2011.The 'colony' in Olive Schreiner‟s fiction an...
Olive Emilie Albertina Schreiner (1855-1920), literata sul-africana de origem anglófona, é hoje lemb...
M.A.This study approaches a special area of comparative literature in English which has not been res...
The nature of the relationship between (proto-)feminism and (anti-)imperialism is highly contested. ...
The literary oeuvre of the Namibian author, Giselher W. Hoffmann, illustrates the way in which liter...
This book works across established categories of modernism and postcolonialism in order to radically...
Olive Schreiner, writing in the tradition of George Eliot and the Brontës, was an isolated yet origi...
In this paper I will discuss a literary trope that exemplifies the Manichean clarity to which Nixon...
Olive Schreiner was the first 'modern' colonial writer from South Africa, and one of the most brilli...
My creative production, 'A Woman of Passion', a novel about Olive Schreiner, South Africa's first wh...
The farm novels of southern Africa can be considered microcosms of gender stereotypes and racial att...
As commentators such as Lewis Nkosi and Malvern van Wyk Smith have noted, even though writers from S...
Many writers, some of whom have much more established literaryreputations than Blackburn, have been ...
Thesis (M.A. (English))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2005The farm in South Africa i...
This study constitutes an inquiry into how Olive Schreiner‟s peripheral position as a colonial woman...
Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2011.The 'colony' in Olive Schreiner‟s fiction an...
Olive Emilie Albertina Schreiner (1855-1920), literata sul-africana de origem anglófona, é hoje lemb...
M.A.This study approaches a special area of comparative literature in English which has not been res...
The nature of the relationship between (proto-)feminism and (anti-)imperialism is highly contested. ...
The literary oeuvre of the Namibian author, Giselher W. Hoffmann, illustrates the way in which liter...
This book works across established categories of modernism and postcolonialism in order to radically...
Olive Schreiner, writing in the tradition of George Eliot and the Brontës, was an isolated yet origi...
In this paper I will discuss a literary trope that exemplifies the Manichean clarity to which Nixon...
Olive Schreiner was the first 'modern' colonial writer from South Africa, and one of the most brilli...
My creative production, 'A Woman of Passion', a novel about Olive Schreiner, South Africa's first wh...
The farm novels of southern Africa can be considered microcosms of gender stereotypes and racial att...
As commentators such as Lewis Nkosi and Malvern van Wyk Smith have noted, even though writers from S...
Many writers, some of whom have much more established literaryreputations than Blackburn, have been ...
Thesis (M.A. (English))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2005The farm in South Africa i...
This study constitutes an inquiry into how Olive Schreiner‟s peripheral position as a colonial woman...