Anxious Records: Race, Imperial Belonging, and the Black Literary Imagination, 1900 - 1946

This dissertation excavates the print and archive culture of diasporic and continental Africans who forged a community in Cape Town between 1900 and 1946. Although the writers I consider write after the Victorian era, I use the term "black Victorian" to preserve their own political investm...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Collis, Victoria J.
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7916/D8S4705F
id ndltd-columbia.edu-oai-academiccommons.columbia.edu-10.7916-D8S4705F
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-columbia.edu-oai-academiccommons.columbia.edu-10.7916-D8S4705F2019-05-09T15:14:07ZAnxious Records: Race, Imperial Belonging, and the Black Literary Imagination, 1900 - 1946Collis, Victoria J.2013ThesesAfrican AmericansAfricansThis dissertation excavates the print and archive culture of diasporic and continental Africans who forged a community in Cape Town between 1900 and 1946. Although the writers I consider write after the Victorian era, I use the term "black Victorian" to preserve their own political investments in a late nineteenth-century understanding of liberal empire. With the abolition of slavery in 1834 across the British Empire and the Cape Colony's qualified nonracial franchise of 1853, Cape Town, and District Six in particular, took on new significance in black radicalism. By writing periodicals, pamphlets and autobiographies, black Victorians hoped to write themselves into the culture of empire. These recovered texts read uncannily, unsettling the construction of official archives as well as contemporary canons of South African, African and diasporic African literatures. By turning to the traffic of ideas between Africa and its diaspora in Cape Town, this dissertation recovers a vision of (black) modernity that had not yet succumbed to the formulations of anti-imperial nationalisms.Englishhttps://doi.org/10.7916/D8S4705F
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic African Americans
Africans
spellingShingle African Americans
Africans
Collis, Victoria J.
Anxious Records: Race, Imperial Belonging, and the Black Literary Imagination, 1900 - 1946
description This dissertation excavates the print and archive culture of diasporic and continental Africans who forged a community in Cape Town between 1900 and 1946. Although the writers I consider write after the Victorian era, I use the term "black Victorian" to preserve their own political investments in a late nineteenth-century understanding of liberal empire. With the abolition of slavery in 1834 across the British Empire and the Cape Colony's qualified nonracial franchise of 1853, Cape Town, and District Six in particular, took on new significance in black radicalism. By writing periodicals, pamphlets and autobiographies, black Victorians hoped to write themselves into the culture of empire. These recovered texts read uncannily, unsettling the construction of official archives as well as contemporary canons of South African, African and diasporic African literatures. By turning to the traffic of ideas between Africa and its diaspora in Cape Town, this dissertation recovers a vision of (black) modernity that had not yet succumbed to the formulations of anti-imperial nationalisms.
author Collis, Victoria J.
author_facet Collis, Victoria J.
author_sort Collis, Victoria J.
title Anxious Records: Race, Imperial Belonging, and the Black Literary Imagination, 1900 - 1946
title_short Anxious Records: Race, Imperial Belonging, and the Black Literary Imagination, 1900 - 1946
title_full Anxious Records: Race, Imperial Belonging, and the Black Literary Imagination, 1900 - 1946
title_fullStr Anxious Records: Race, Imperial Belonging, and the Black Literary Imagination, 1900 - 1946
title_full_unstemmed Anxious Records: Race, Imperial Belonging, and the Black Literary Imagination, 1900 - 1946
title_sort anxious records: race, imperial belonging, and the black literary imagination, 1900 - 1946
publishDate 2013
url https://doi.org/10.7916/D8S4705F
work_keys_str_mv AT collisvictoriaj anxiousrecordsraceimperialbelongingandtheblackliteraryimagination19001946
_version_ 1719046065033838592