This paper concerns eight women's testimonies produced over a period of some fifty years, which describe a protest about meat rations at Brandfort concentration camp in November 1901, during the 1899-1902 South African War. The focus here is not the ‘event itself’, which cannot now be recovered except in its archival or documentary forms, but on the subsequent re/telling of this incident, and on the politicised, (proto-) nationalist content and tone of the Brandfort protest testimonies. While proto-nationalism is present from the earliest extant testimony, the development of this is traced over time, showing how the later testimonies evince a strongly triumphalist nationalist tone. The retrospectively inscribed testimonies of the protest ar...
Thesis (PhD (History))--University of Pretoria, 2023.The South African War is an important historica...
This contribution addresses the dynamics of Dutch memory politics in the Dutch–South African exchang...
In this article, the spirituality and the memorialisation of the dead of the Durban Concentration C...
PhD ThesisThis thesis concerns women's testimonies of the South African War, specifically their acc...
This thesis concerns women's testimonies of the South African War, specifically their accounts of th...
This paper considers the idea of ‘everyday life’ in Boer women’s narratives of the South African Wa...
In this article, the variety of experiences of Natal Afrikaner women as British subjects who were r...
Women have occupied a central place in the ideological formulations of nationalist movements. In par...
The histories of Southern African postcolonies which experienced decolonization and political transi...
Re-negotiating the past, a predominant concern of contemporary postcolonial literature and criticism...
In ‘The Rise and Fall of Afrikaner Women’ (2003), Gilliomee argues that Afrikaner women’s history ‘...
Abstract: On 11 October 1899 hostilities commenced between the former British Empire and the two Boe...
In this article, the variety of experiences of Natal Afrikaner women as British subjects who were r...
The South African War of 1899-1902 served as the culmination of a century-long conflict between two ...
Anae, N ORCiD: 0000-0001-8441-2771Purpose - There exists no detailed account of the 40 Australian wo...
Thesis (PhD (History))--University of Pretoria, 2023.The South African War is an important historica...
This contribution addresses the dynamics of Dutch memory politics in the Dutch–South African exchang...
In this article, the spirituality and the memorialisation of the dead of the Durban Concentration C...
PhD ThesisThis thesis concerns women's testimonies of the South African War, specifically their acc...
This thesis concerns women's testimonies of the South African War, specifically their accounts of th...
This paper considers the idea of ‘everyday life’ in Boer women’s narratives of the South African Wa...
In this article, the variety of experiences of Natal Afrikaner women as British subjects who were r...
Women have occupied a central place in the ideological formulations of nationalist movements. In par...
The histories of Southern African postcolonies which experienced decolonization and political transi...
Re-negotiating the past, a predominant concern of contemporary postcolonial literature and criticism...
In ‘The Rise and Fall of Afrikaner Women’ (2003), Gilliomee argues that Afrikaner women’s history ‘...
Abstract: On 11 October 1899 hostilities commenced between the former British Empire and the two Boe...
In this article, the variety of experiences of Natal Afrikaner women as British subjects who were r...
The South African War of 1899-1902 served as the culmination of a century-long conflict between two ...
Anae, N ORCiD: 0000-0001-8441-2771Purpose - There exists no detailed account of the 40 Australian wo...
Thesis (PhD (History))--University of Pretoria, 2023.The South African War is an important historica...
This contribution addresses the dynamics of Dutch memory politics in the Dutch–South African exchang...
In this article, the spirituality and the memorialisation of the dead of the Durban Concentration C...