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Letters home : the experiences and perceptions of middle class British women at the Cape 1820-1850

Bibliography: pages 209-219.

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Main Author: Erlank, Natasha
Other Authors: Bickford-Smith, Vivian
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Historical Studies 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Erlank, Natasha
author2 Bickford-Smith, Vivian
author_browse Bickford-Smith, Vivian
Erlank, Natasha
author_facet Bickford-Smith, Vivian
Erlank, Natasha
author_sort Erlank, Natasha
collection Thesis
description Bibliography: pages 209-219.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/22399
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:08.525Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Department of Historical Studies
publisherStr Department of Historical Studies
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/22399 Letters home : the experiences and perceptions of middle class British women at the Cape 1820-1850 Erlank, Natasha Bickford-Smith, Vivian Women - South Africa - History Middle class women - South Africa of Good Hope Bibliography: pages 209-219. My thesis is concerned with the experiences and perceptions of British women living in the Cape Colony, South Africa, during the first half of the nineteenth century. My chief source materials are the letters and diaries written by different women in the period 1820-1850. The women in my thesis were members of the British middle class and proponents of its dominant ideology. This revolved around a "separation of spheres" which prescribed particular types of behaviour for men and women. This view was more of an ideal than a reality, and women in this period found ways in which to both resist and enforce its prescriptions. I am interested in the negotiation of identity that occurred when British women arrived at the Cape. In order to tap into their experiences, I examine in detail the writing of several women who lived in Cape Town, and then compare this to women's writing in different parts of the colony. What emerges is a version of South African history in which the experiences of individual women challenge assumptions about the existence of middle class and colonial homogenising discourses. Women in Cape Town, on the eastern frontier and on mission stations lived in different circumstances. The contexts in which they wrote affected the versions of themselves that they revealed in their writing. The different ways in which they wrote, and they ways in which they constructed a d represented their identities, challenge attempts to fit them into the contemporary feminine mould. While they were creating their own identifies through the medium of letters, they were also creating cultural artefacts. Their letters formed the basis of a private literate culture which both represented these women and their particular view of the Cape to the rest of the world. Women controlled what was written in their letters - their self-representations were presented to their readers in a version not mediated through their male relatives. In their own letters, they were not men's wives, they were their own women. Most of the women I discuss had a commitment to Christianity, and the promotion of Christianity. Missionary wives and evangelical women had a code of behaviour that did not always accord with middle class ideology. They measured their behaviour according to religious and moral standards. This allowed them to contravene middle class ethics if they felt these contravened their own codes of morality. Depending on circumstances, women could be called upon to behave either as middle class women or Christian women, and in these instances would conform to the identity under either ideology. I would therefore suggest that not only did English middle-class women at the Cape create their subjectivity in terms of their status as women, as middle class women and as white women, but they also constructed their subjectivity in terms of their religious beliefs - as religious women. 2016-11-01T10:34:52Z 2016-11-01T10:34:52Z 1995 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22399 eng application/pdf Department of Historical Studies Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Women - South Africa - History
Middle class women - South Africa of Good Hope
Erlank, Natasha
Letters home : the experiences and perceptions of middle class British women at the Cape 1820-1850
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Letters home : the experiences and perceptions of middle class British women at the Cape 1820-1850
title_full Letters home : the experiences and perceptions of middle class British women at the Cape 1820-1850
title_fullStr Letters home : the experiences and perceptions of middle class British women at the Cape 1820-1850
title_full_unstemmed Letters home : the experiences and perceptions of middle class British women at the Cape 1820-1850
title_short Letters home : the experiences and perceptions of middle class British women at the Cape 1820-1850
title_sort letters home the experiences and perceptions of middle class british women at the cape 1820 1850
topic Women - South Africa - History
Middle class women - South Africa of Good Hope
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22399
work_keys_str_mv AT erlanknatasha lettershometheexperiencesandperceptionsofmiddleclassbritishwomenatthecape18201850