Olive Schreiner (1855-1920)
South African
novelist and political activist most famous for her book The Story of an African Farm (1883). Schreiner was a pioneer in her
treatment of women in her fiction and made many perceptive observations on the
political future of South Africa, particularly the situation of blacks under
apartheid. Born Olive Emilie Albertina Schreiner in Wittebergen, South Africa
(then Cape Colony), she had no formal education but was taught at home by her
mother. She began writing two of her novels while supporting herself as a
governess from 1874 to 1881, after which she went to England, hoping to study. The Story of an African Farm was
published under the pseudonym Ralph Iron while Schreiner was in England. The
story of a young girl growing up on a farm in the grasslands of southern
Africa, trying to attain her independence in the face of a rigid, repressive
society, the book met with immediate success. In England Schreiner came to be
accepted by literary and political circles and became a supporter of women's
rights. She was a friend of Cecil Rhodes, a British statesman and major
proponent for British rule in southern Africa, but parted company with him for
political reasons. Schreiner caused controversy in relation to Rhodes's
activities with her book Trooper Halkett
of Mashonaland (1897), which criticized the way Rhodesia (which became
Zimbabwe in 1980) was colonized. She returned to South Africa in 1899 and
worked on behalf of the Boers, a local, white Afrikaner group that refused to
live under British rule, during the Boer War (1899-1902). Schreiner also met
and married a politician, Samuel Cronwright—he changed his name to
Cronwright-Schreiner—and they both worked for a variety of political causes. In
1911 she wrote Women and Labour, a
feminist novel criticizing the relations between men and women. Schreiner spent
her last years in England, separated from her husband, but returned to South
Africa in 1920 shortly before she died. Her other novels, both with feminist
themes, are From Man to Man (1927)
and Undine (1929). They were
published posthumously.
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