Imperialists in Broken Boots: Poor Whites and Philanthropy in Southern African Writing
English
By (author): Julie Cairnie
This book examines writing which is concerned with the period of the poor white problem and the poor white solution (1870s1940s) in Southern Africa. It argues that poor white is not a narrow economic category, but describes those who threaten to collapse boundariesracial, sexual, and class boundaries. It studies four writers who migrate between Britain and Southern Africa, who engage with the problem and the solution, and who foreground ambiguity in their ambiguously genred texts. Olive Schreiner and Doris Leasing highlight the problem as they embrace the threat posed by poor whites, while Robert Tressell and Daphne Anderson foreground the solution as they argue for the incorporation of the poor into imperial myths about white homogeneity and upward mobility. Based on an historical approach, this book explores three premises. The first premise is that poor white is a liminal category, that it encompasses economic failures and social transgressors. The second premise is that Southern African life writing engages with its historical and political moment. The third premise is that philanthropy is central to the articulation of the problem and the solution. The final concluding chapter reflects upon the re-emergence of poor whiteism since the end of Apartheid and the collapse of Zimbabwe, and reflects upon the problem of black poverty.
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