Wednesday, March 27, 2019
Essay --
The Boer War has been the focus of a considerable body of manufacture numbering over two hundred novels and at least cubic decimetre short stories in English, Afrikaans, French, German Dutch, Swedish and even Urdu if we count the interpreting of Rider skeletals Jess in 1923.For the social and literary historian it provides over a hundred year record of the relationship between literature and history.The enormous majority of novels and short stories about the Anglo-Boer conflict were published around the date of the war and reflect the values and attitudes to British imperialism. Some of the titles published then give a fairly accurate impression of the patriotic excitement which found its way into print B. Ronan, The Passing of the Boer (1899) E. Ames, The Tremendous Twins, or How the Boers were beat (1900) C.D. Haskim, For the Queen in southeastern Africa (1900) F. Russell, The Boers Blunder (1900) H. Nisbet, For Right and England (1900) and The pudding stone Makers (1900 ). Among the much notable literary figures of the day who were closely associated with the events of the AngloBoer conflict were Rudyard Kipling (18651936) Winston Churchill (18741965) H. Rider Haggard (18561925) Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (18591930) Sir Percy Fitzpatrick (18621931) Edgar Wallace (18751932) and John Buchan (18751940)).Some of the most interesting names associated with satirising the AngloBoer conflict accept H.H. Munro (Saki) (Alice in Pall Mall, 1900) G.K. Chesterton (The Napoleon of Nottinghill, 1904), Hilaire Belloc (Mr Clutterbucks Election, 1908) and Kipling Fables for the Staff, published in The Friend in 1900 in which he lampooned the incompetence of the British prevalent staff. Douglas Blackburns A Burgher Quixote (1903) is one of the most unde... ...any Boers from the Cape, and later the two republics, who conjugate the National Scouts and fought for the British, but there were many Cape Boers who joined the commandos. This verbal expression of the war pr oduced some of its finest responses in fiction, for example Herman Charles Bosmans short stories The Traitors Wife and The thing at Ysterspruit, and Louis C. Leipoldts novel Stormwrack (1980). The question of divided loyalties is a large numeral in Boer War fiction.Nor did the conflict end with the war. As late as 1980 a successful Australian film Breaker Morant was based on Kenneth Rosss play and Kit Dentons novel The Breaker (1973).The Boer War has continued to be a popular subject for escapist fiction. Whereas the writers at the height of the Empire were overwhelmingly British, with the decline of imperialism the field is now dominated by South African writers
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