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Mary Kingsley

Mary Henrietta Kingsley (13 October 1862 – 3 June 1900) was an English ethnographer, writer and explorer who made numerous travels through West Africa and wrote several books on her experiences there. Historians have credited Kingsley's work with helping to shape Western perceptions of the culture of Africa and colonialism.[1][2][3]

Mary Kingsley
Mary Kingsley (1890s)
Born(1862-10-13)13 October 1862
Died3 June 1900(1900-06-03) (aged 37)
NationalityEnglish
Known forTravels and writings on West Africa

Early life edit

Kingsley was born in London on 13 October 1862,[1] the daughter and oldest child of physician, traveller and writer George Kingsley[4] and Mary Bailey. She came from a family of writers, as she was also the niece of novelists Charles Kingsley and Henry Kingsley. The family moved to Highgate less than a year after her birth, the same home where her brother Charles George R. ("Charley") Kingsley was born in 1866, and by 1881 were living in Southwood House, Bexley in Kent.

Her father was a physician and worked for George Herbert, 13th Earl of Pembroke and other aristocrats and was frequently away from home on his excursions. During these voyages he collected information for his studies. Dr. Kingsley accompanied Lord Dunraven on a trip to North America from 1870 to 1875. During the trip, Dr. Kingsley was invited to accompany United States Army officer George Armstrong Custer's expedition against the Sioux. The subsequent Battle of the Little Bighorn terrified the Kingsley family, but they were relieved to learn that bad weather had kept Dr. Kingsley from joining Custer. It is possible that her father's views on the brutal treatment of Native Americans in the United States helped shape Mary's later opinions on European colonialism in West Africa.[5]

Mary Kingsley had little formal schooling compared to her brother, other than German lessons at a young age;[6] because, at that time and at her level of society, education was not thought to be necessary for a girl.[7] She did, however, have access to her father's large library and loved to hear his stories of foreign countries.[8] She did not enjoy novels that were deemed more appropriate for young ladies of the time, such as those by Jane Austen or Charlotte Brontë, but preferred books on the sciences and memoirs of explorers. In 1886, her brother Charley entered Christ's College, Cambridge, to read law; this allowed Mary to make several academic connections and a few friends.

There is little indication that Kingsley was raised Christian; instead, she was a self-proclaimed believer with, "summed up in her own words [...] 'an utter faith in God'" and even identified strongly with what was described as 'the African religion'.[9] She is known for criticizing Christian missionaries and their work for supplanting pre-existing African cultures without proving any material benefits in return.[10]

The 1891 England census finds Mary's mother and her two children living at 7 Mortimer Road, Cambridge, where Charles is recorded as a BA Student at Law and Mary as a Student of Medicine. In her later years, Kingsley's mother became ill, and she was expected to care for her well-being. Unable to leave her mother's side, she was limited in her travel opportunities. Soon, her father was also bedridden with rheumatic fever following an excursion.

Dr. Kingsley died in February 1892, and Mrs. Kingsley followed a few months later in April of the same year. "Freed" from her family responsibilities and with an inheritance of £8,600 to be split evenly with her brother, Kingsley was now able to travel as she had always dreamed.[11]

Adventures to Africa edit

After a preliminary visit to the Canary Islands, Kingsley decided to travel to the west coast of Africa. Generally, the only non-African women who embarked on (often dangerous) journeys to Africa were the wives of missionaries, government officials, or explorers. Exploration and adventure had not been seen as fitting roles for English women, though this was changing under the influence of figures such as Isabella Bird and Marianne North. African women were surprised that a woman of Kingsley's age was travelling without a man, as she was frequently asked why her husband was not accompanying her.

Kingsley landed in Sierra Leone on 17 August 1893 and from there travelled further to Luanda in Angola. She lived with local people, who taught her necessary surviving-skills for living in the wilderness, and gave her advice. She often went into dangerous areas alone. Her training as a nurse at the de:Kaiserswerther Diakonie had prepared her for slight injuries and jungle maladies that she would later encounter. Kingsley returned to England in December 1893.

Upon her return, Kingsley secured support and aid from Dr. Albert Günther, a prominent zoologist at the British Museum, as well as a writing agreement with publisher George Macmillan, for she wished to publish her travel accounts.

She returned to Africa yet again on 23 December 1894 with more support and supplies from England, as well as increased self-assurance in her work. She longed to study "cannibal" people and their traditional religious practices, commonly referred to as "fetish" during the Victorian Era. In April, she became acquainted with Scottish missionary Mary Slessor, another European woman living among native African populations with little company and no husband. It was during her meeting with Slessor that Kingsley first became aware of the custom of twin killing, a custom which Slessor was determined to stop. The native people believed that one of the twins was the offspring of the devil who had secretly mated with the mother and since the innocent child was impossible to distinguish, both were killed and the mother was often killed as well for attracting the devil to impregnate her. Kingsley arrived at Slessor's residence shortly after she had taken in a recent mother of twins and her surviving child.[12]

Later in Gabon, Kingsley canoed up the Ogooué River, where she collected specimens of fish previously unknown to western science, three of which were later named after her. After meeting the Fang people and travelling through uncharted Fang territory, she daringly climbed the 4,040 metres (13,250 ft) Mount Cameroon by a route not previously attempted by any other European. She moored her boat at Donguila.[13]

Return to England edit

When she returned home in November 1895, Kingsley was greeted by journalists eager to interview her. The reports that were drummed up about her voyage, however, were most upsetting, as the papers portrayed her as a "New Woman", an image which she did not embrace. Kingsley distanced herself from any feminist movement claims, arguing that women's suffrage was "a minor question; while there was a most vital section of men disenfranchised women could wait".[14] Her consistent lack of identification with women's rights movements may be attributed to a number of causes, such as the attempt to ensure that her work would be received more favorably; in fact, some insist this might be a direct reference to her belief in the importance of securing rights for British traders in West Africa.[15]

Over the next three years, she toured England, giving lectures about life in Africa to a wide array of audiences. She was the first woman to address the Liverpool and Manchester chambers of commerce.[16]

Kingsley upset the Church of England when she criticised missionaries for attempting to convert the people of Africa and corrupt their religions. In this regard, she discussed many aspects of African life that were shocking to English people, including polygamy, which, she argued was practiced out of necessity.[17] After living with the African people, Kingsley became directly aware how their societies functioned and how prohibiting customs such as polygamy would be detrimental to their way of life. She knew that the typical African wives had too many tasks to manage alone. Missionaries in Africa often required converted men to abandon all but one of their wives, leaving the other women and children without the support of a husband – thus creating immense social and economic problems.[18] Kingsley's also criticised teetotal missionaries, suggesting that those who drank small quantities of alcohol had better survival rates.[19]

Kingsley's beliefs about cultural and economic imperialism are complex and widely debated by scholars today. Though, on the one hand, she regarded African people and cultures as those who needed protection and preservation,[17] she also believed in the necessity of indirect rule and the adoption of European culture and technology by indigenous populations, insisting that there was some work in West Africa that had to be completed by white men.[20] Yet in Studies in West Africa she writes: "Although a Darwinian to the core, I doubt if evolution in a neat and tidy perpendicular line, with Fetish at the bottom and Christianity at the top, represents the true state of affairs."[21] Other, more acceptable, beliefs were variously perceived and used in Western European society – by traders, colonists, women's rights activists and others – and, articulated as they were in great style, helped shape popular perception of "the African" and "his" land.

Writings edit

Kingsley wrote two books about her experiences: Travels in West Africa (1897),[22] which was an immediate best-seller, and West African Studies (1899), both of which gained her respect and prestige within the scholarly community. Some newspapers, such as The Times under pro-imperialist editor Flora Shaw, refused to publish reviews of her works. Though some have argued that such refusals were grounded in the anti-imperialist arguments presented in Kingsley's works, this unlikely explains her frequently unfavourable reception in Europe, because she was both a supporter of the activities of European traders in West Africa and of indirect rule.[14][6]

The notable success of Travels in West Africa was due in no small part to the vigour and droll humour of her writing, that, in the guise of a ripping yarn, never wavers from its true purpose—to complete the work her father had left undone. Between poles of manifest wit and latent analysis Kingsley constructs in images – "… not an artist's picture, but a photograph, an overladen with detail, colourless version"[23] – a discourse of poetic thought; a phenomenon oft-noted in the texts of Walter Benjamin. Of her method she said: "It is merely that I have the power of bringing out in my fellow-creatures, white or black, their virtues, in a way honourable to them and fortunate for me."[24] Of her purpose she said: "[M]y motive for going to West Africa was study; this study was that of native ideas and practices in religion and law. My reason for taking up this study was a desire to complete a great book my father, George Kingsley, had left at his death unfinished."[23] Of her father she said: "The work that he did seemed to promise a career of great brilliancy and distinction – a promise which, unfortunately, was never entirely fulfilled."[25] In truth George Kingsley produced but a few scattered fragments, not a scrap of which found its way into the great book of Mary Kingsley. It is, rather, in the text of his daughter – a forerunner of Lévi-Strauss and his Tristes Tropiques[26] – that the dream wish of the father is finally accomplished; and family honour sustained.

Death edit

 
The funeral cortege of Mary Kingsley at the pier in Simonstown: 1900

After the outbreak of the Second Boer War, Kingsley travelled to Cape Town on the SS Moor in March 1900,[27] and volunteered as a nurse. She was stationed at Simon's Town hospital, where she treated Boer prisoners of war. After contributing her services to the ill for about two months, she developed symptoms of typhoid and died on 3 June 1900.[2][3] An eyewitness reported: "She rallied for a short time but realised she was going. She asked to be left to die alone, saying she did not wish anyone to see her in her weakness. Animals she said, went away to die alone."[28] In accordance with her wishes, she was buried at sea.[29] "This was, I believe, the only favour and distinction that she ever asked for herself; and it was accorded with every circumstance and honour ... A party of West Yorkshires, with band before them, drew the coffin from the hospital on a gun carriage to the pier … Torpedo Boat No. 29 put to sea and, rounding Cape Point, committed her to the element in which she had chosen to be laid."[28] "A touch of comedy, which would 'have amused' Kingsley herself, was added when the coffin refused to sink and had to be hauled back on board then thrown over again weighed down this time with an anchor."[30]

Legacy edit

Kingsley's tales and opinions of life in Africa helped draw attention to British imperial agendas abroad and the native customs of African people that were previously little discussed but misunderstood by people in Europe. The Fair Commerce Party formed soon after her death, pressuring for improved conditions for the natives of British colonies. Various reform associations were formed in her honour and helped facilitate governmental change. The Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine founded an honorary medal in her name. In Sierra Leone, the Mary Kingsley Auditorium at the Institute of African Studies, Fourah Bay College (University of Sierra Leone), was named after her.

Published works edit

  • "Travels on the western coast of equatorial Africa". Scottish Geographical Magazine. 12 (3): 113–124. 1896. doi:10.1080/00369229608732860. ISSN 0036-9225. Zenodo1430411.
  • Travels in West Africa. BookRix. 2015 [1897]. ISBN 978-3-7368-0451-7.
  • Travels in West Africa. Washington DC: National Geographic. 2002 [1897]. ISBN 9780792266389. with an Introduction by Anthony Brandt
  • West African Studies (Second, expanded ed.). London: MacMillan. 1901 [1899].

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b "Mary Kingsley Facts". biography.yourdictionary.com. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  2. ^ a b "Mary Kingsley". Women in European History. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  3. ^ a b "Death of Mary Kingsley". History Today. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  4. ^ Seccombe 1892.
  5. ^ Frank 2006, pp. 37–38.
  6. ^ a b Gwynn & Rattray 1932.
  7. ^ Wilcox 1975, p. 173.
  8. ^ Frank 2006, p. 28.
  9. ^ Gwynn & Rattray 1932, p. 362.
  10. ^ Kingsley 2002, p. xiv.
  11. ^ Frank 2006, p. 57.
  12. ^ Frank 2006, pp. 130–131.
  13. ^ Alexander 1990, p. 254.
  14. ^ a b Flint 1963, p. 96.
  15. ^ Flint 1963, pp. 95–104.
  16. ^ Matthew & Harrison 2004, p. 713.
  17. ^ a b Kingsley 2002, Introduction.
  18. ^ Frank 2006, pp. 157–159.
  19. ^ Armston-Sheret, Edward; Walker, Kim (December 2021). "Is alcohol a tropical medicine? Scientific understandings of climate, stimulants and bodies in Victorian and Edwardian tropical travel". The British Journal for the History of Science. 54 (4): 476. doi:10.1017/S0007087421000649. ISSN 0007-0874. PMID 34558394.
  20. ^ Kingsley 2002, p. 454.
  21. ^ Kingsley 1901, p. 101.
  22. ^ "Review of Travels in West Africa: Congo Français, Corisco, and Cameroons by Mary H. Kingsley". The Athenæum (3615): 173–176. 6 February 1897. hdl:2027/iau.31858029267667.
  23. ^ a b Kingsley 1901, p. xi.
  24. ^ Kingsley 1901, p. viii.
  25. ^ Kingsley & Kingsley 1900, p. 22.
  26. ^ Lévi-Strauss 1967.
  27. ^ "The War in South Africa – Embarcation of Troops". The Times. No. 36087. London. 12 March 1900. p. 7.
  28. ^ a b Gwynn 1940.
  29. ^ Matthew & Harrison 2004, p. 714.
  30. ^ Frank 2006, pp. 298–299.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

  • Bausch, Richard (2009). Hello to the Cannibals: A Novel. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-188208-1. (A fictional account involving Mary Kingsley).
  • Birkett, Dea (1992). Mary Kingsley: Imperial Adventuress. Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-333-48920-8.
  • Birkett, D. J. (3 January 2008). "Kingsley, Mary Henrietta". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15620. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Blunt, Alison (1994). Travel, Gender, and Imperialism: Mary Kingsley and West Africa. Guilford Press. ISBN 978-0-89862-546-2.
  • Brisson, Ulrike (Fall 2005). "Fish and Fetish: Mary Kingsley's Studies of Fetish in West Africa". Journal of Narrative Theory. 35 (3): 326–340. doi:10.1353/jnt.2006.0009. S2CID 161641683.
  • Davidson, L.C. (1889). Hints to Lady Travellers. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Flint, J.E. (1965). "Mary Kingsley". African Affairs. 64 (256): 150–161. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.afraf.a095373.
  • Ingemanson, Birgitta M. (1993). Bonnie Frederick; Sarah H. McLeod (eds.). "Under Cover: The Paradox of Victorian Women's Travel Costume". Women and the Journey: The Female Travel Experience. Pullman, WA: Washington State University Press.
  • Lloyd, Clare (1985). The Travelling Naturalists. Croom Helm. ISBN 978-0-7099-1658-1. A study of 18th Century Natural History - includes Charles Waterton, John Hanning Speke, Henry Seebohm and Mary Kingsley. Contains colour and black and white reproductions. ISBN 0-7099-1658-2
  • McLoone, Margo (1997). Women explorers in Africa: Christina Dodwell, Delia Akeley, Mary Kingsley, Florence von Sass Baker, and Alexandrine Tinne. Capstone. ISBN 978-1-56065-505-3.
  • Middleton, Dorothy (1973). "Some Victorian Lady Travellers". The Geographical Journal. 139 (1): 65–75. doi:10.2307/1795796. ISSN 0016-7398. JSTOR 1795796.
  • Murray, Sabina (2011). Tales of the New World. Black Cat. ISBN 978-0-8021-7083-5. (The opening short story, Fish, is a fictional account of Kingsley's life)
  • Myer, Valerie Grosvenor (1989). A Victorian lady in Africa: the story of Mary Kingsley. Ashford, Buchan & Enright. ISBN 978-1-85253-099-0.
  • Woolf, Virginia (1938). Three Guineas. Hogarth Press. (An interesting look at women, race, and civilization, though not directly related to Mary Kingsley).

External links edit

  • The Royal African Society has a short biography that includes a bibliography.
  • Works by Mary Henrietta Kingsley at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Mary Kingsley at Internet Archive
  • Works by Mary Kingsley at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Travels in West Africa at Project Gutenberg
  • Mary H. Kingsley, 1862-1900 at the Tom Perry Special Collections, Brigham Young University
  • "Archival material relating to Mary Kingsley". UK National Archives.  
  • Mary Henrietta Kingsley Papers (MS 1485). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library.

mary, kingsley, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, december, 2018, mary, henrietta, kingsley, october, 1862, june, 1900, english, et. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article December 2018 Mary Henrietta Kingsley 13 October 1862 3 June 1900 was an English ethnographer writer and explorer who made numerous travels through West Africa and wrote several books on her experiences there Historians have credited Kingsley s work with helping to shape Western perceptions of the culture of Africa and colonialism 1 2 3 Mary KingsleyMary Kingsley 1890s Born 1862 10 13 13 October 1862Islington LondonDied3 June 1900 1900 06 03 aged 37 Simon s Town Cape ColonyNationalityEnglishKnown forTravels and writings on West Africa Contents 1 Early life 2 Adventures to Africa 3 Return to England 4 Writings 5 Death 6 Legacy 7 Published works 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Citations 11 Sources 11 1 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life editKingsley was born in London on 13 October 1862 1 the daughter and oldest child of physician traveller and writer George Kingsley 4 and Mary Bailey She came from a family of writers as she was also the niece of novelists Charles Kingsley and Henry Kingsley The family moved to Highgate less than a year after her birth the same home where her brother Charles George R Charley Kingsley was born in 1866 and by 1881 were living in Southwood House Bexley in Kent Her father was a physician and worked for George Herbert 13th Earl of Pembroke and other aristocrats and was frequently away from home on his excursions During these voyages he collected information for his studies Dr Kingsley accompanied Lord Dunraven on a trip to North America from 1870 to 1875 During the trip Dr Kingsley was invited to accompany United States Army officer George Armstrong Custer s expedition against the Sioux The subsequent Battle of the Little Bighorn terrified the Kingsley family but they were relieved to learn that bad weather had kept Dr Kingsley from joining Custer It is possible that her father s views on the brutal treatment of Native Americans in the United States helped shape Mary s later opinions on European colonialism in West Africa 5 Mary Kingsley had little formal schooling compared to her brother other than German lessons at a young age 6 because at that time and at her level of society education was not thought to be necessary for a girl 7 She did however have access to her father s large library and loved to hear his stories of foreign countries 8 She did not enjoy novels that were deemed more appropriate for young ladies of the time such as those by Jane Austen or Charlotte Bronte but preferred books on the sciences and memoirs of explorers In 1886 her brother Charley entered Christ s College Cambridge to read law this allowed Mary to make several academic connections and a few friends There is little indication that Kingsley was raised Christian instead she was a self proclaimed believer with summed up in her own words an utter faith in God and even identified strongly with what was described as the African religion 9 She is known for criticizing Christian missionaries and their work for supplanting pre existing African cultures without proving any material benefits in return 10 The 1891 England census finds Mary s mother and her two children living at 7 Mortimer Road Cambridge where Charles is recorded as a BA Student at Law and Mary as a Student of Medicine In her later years Kingsley s mother became ill and she was expected to care for her well being Unable to leave her mother s side she was limited in her travel opportunities Soon her father was also bedridden with rheumatic fever following an excursion Dr Kingsley died in February 1892 and Mrs Kingsley followed a few months later in April of the same year Freed from her family responsibilities and with an inheritance of 8 600 to be split evenly with her brother Kingsley was now able to travel as she had always dreamed 11 Adventures to Africa editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Mary Kingsley news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message After a preliminary visit to the Canary Islands Kingsley decided to travel to the west coast of Africa Generally the only non African women who embarked on often dangerous journeys to Africa were the wives of missionaries government officials or explorers Exploration and adventure had not been seen as fitting roles for English women though this was changing under the influence of figures such as Isabella Bird and Marianne North African women were surprised that a woman of Kingsley s age was travelling without a man as she was frequently asked why her husband was not accompanying her Kingsley landed in Sierra Leone on 17 August 1893 and from there travelled further to Luanda in Angola She lived with local people who taught her necessary surviving skills for living in the wilderness and gave her advice She often went into dangerous areas alone Her training as a nurse at the de Kaiserswerther Diakonie had prepared her for slight injuries and jungle maladies that she would later encounter Kingsley returned to England in December 1893 Upon her return Kingsley secured support and aid from Dr Albert Gunther a prominent zoologist at the British Museum as well as a writing agreement with publisher George Macmillan for she wished to publish her travel accounts She returned to Africa yet again on 23 December 1894 with more support and supplies from England as well as increased self assurance in her work She longed to study cannibal people and their traditional religious practices commonly referred to as fetish during the Victorian Era In April she became acquainted with Scottish missionary Mary Slessor another European woman living among native African populations with little company and no husband It was during her meeting with Slessor that Kingsley first became aware of the custom of twin killing a custom which Slessor was determined to stop The native people believed that one of the twins was the offspring of the devil who had secretly mated with the mother and since the innocent child was impossible to distinguish both were killed and the mother was often killed as well for attracting the devil to impregnate her Kingsley arrived at Slessor s residence shortly after she had taken in a recent mother of twins and her surviving child 12 Later in Gabon Kingsley canoed up the Ogooue River where she collected specimens of fish previously unknown to western science three of which were later named after her After meeting the Fang people and travelling through uncharted Fang territory she daringly climbed the 4 040 metres 13 250 ft Mount Cameroon by a route not previously attempted by any other European She moored her boat at Donguila 13 Return to England editWhen she returned home in November 1895 Kingsley was greeted by journalists eager to interview her The reports that were drummed up about her voyage however were most upsetting as the papers portrayed her as a New Woman an image which she did not embrace Kingsley distanced herself from any feminist movement claims arguing that women s suffrage was a minor question while there was a most vital section of men disenfranchised women could wait 14 Her consistent lack of identification with women s rights movements may be attributed to a number of causes such as the attempt to ensure that her work would be received more favorably in fact some insist this might be a direct reference to her belief in the importance of securing rights for British traders in West Africa 15 Over the next three years she toured England giving lectures about life in Africa to a wide array of audiences She was the first woman to address the Liverpool and Manchester chambers of commerce 16 Kingsley upset the Church of England when she criticised missionaries for attempting to convert the people of Africa and corrupt their religions In this regard she discussed many aspects of African life that were shocking to English people including polygamy which she argued was practiced out of necessity 17 After living with the African people Kingsley became directly aware how their societies functioned and how prohibiting customs such as polygamy would be detrimental to their way of life She knew that the typical African wives had too many tasks to manage alone Missionaries in Africa often required converted men to abandon all but one of their wives leaving the other women and children without the support of a husband thus creating immense social and economic problems 18 Kingsley s also criticised teetotal missionaries suggesting that those who drank small quantities of alcohol had better survival rates 19 Kingsley s beliefs about cultural and economic imperialism are complex and widely debated by scholars today Though on the one hand she regarded African people and cultures as those who needed protection and preservation 17 she also believed in the necessity of indirect rule and the adoption of European culture and technology by indigenous populations insisting that there was some work in West Africa that had to be completed by white men 20 Yet in Studies in West Africa she writes Although a Darwinian to the core I doubt if evolution in a neat and tidy perpendicular line with Fetish at the bottom and Christianity at the top represents the true state of affairs 21 Other more acceptable beliefs were variously perceived and used in Western European society by traders colonists women s rights activists and others and articulated as they were in great style helped shape popular perception of the African and his land Writings editKingsley wrote two books about her experiences Travels in West Africa 1897 22 which was an immediate best seller and West African Studies 1899 both of which gained her respect and prestige within the scholarly community Some newspapers such as The Times under pro imperialist editor Flora Shaw refused to publish reviews of her works Though some have argued that such refusals were grounded in the anti imperialist arguments presented in Kingsley s works this unlikely explains her frequently unfavourable reception in Europe because she was both a supporter of the activities of European traders in West Africa and of indirect rule 14 6 The notable success of Travels in West Africa was due in no small part to the vigour and droll humour of her writing that in the guise of a ripping yarn never wavers from its true purpose to complete the work her father had left undone Between poles of manifest wit and latent analysis Kingsley constructs in images not an artist s picture but a photograph an overladen with detail colourless version 23 a discourse of poetic thought a phenomenon oft noted in the texts of Walter Benjamin Of her method she said It is merely that I have the power of bringing out in my fellow creatures white or black their virtues in a way honourable to them and fortunate for me 24 Of her purpose she said M y motive for going to West Africa was study this study was that of native ideas and practices in religion and law My reason for taking up this study was a desire to complete a great book my father George Kingsley had left at his death unfinished 23 Of her father she said The work that he did seemed to promise a career of great brilliancy and distinction a promise which unfortunately was never entirely fulfilled 25 In truth George Kingsley produced but a few scattered fragments not a scrap of which found its way into the great book of Mary Kingsley It is rather in the text of his daughter a forerunner of Levi Strauss and his Tristes Tropiques 26 that the dream wish of the father is finally accomplished and family honour sustained Death edit nbsp The funeral cortege of Mary Kingsley at the pier in Simonstown 1900After the outbreak of the Second Boer War Kingsley travelled to Cape Town on the SS Moor in March 1900 27 and volunteered as a nurse She was stationed at Simon s Town hospital where she treated Boer prisoners of war After contributing her services to the ill for about two months she developed symptoms of typhoid and died on 3 June 1900 2 3 An eyewitness reported She rallied for a short time but realised she was going She asked to be left to die alone saying she did not wish anyone to see her in her weakness Animals she said went away to die alone 28 In accordance with her wishes she was buried at sea 29 This was I believe the only favour and distinction that she ever asked for herself and it was accorded with every circumstance and honour A party of West Yorkshires with band before them drew the coffin from the hospital on a gun carriage to the pier Torpedo Boat No 29 put to sea and rounding Cape Point committed her to the element in which she had chosen to be laid 28 A touch of comedy which would have amused Kingsley herself was added when the coffin refused to sink and had to be hauled back on board then thrown over again weighed down this time with an anchor 30 Legacy editKingsley s tales and opinions of life in Africa helped draw attention to British imperial agendas abroad and the native customs of African people that were previously little discussed but misunderstood by people in Europe The Fair Commerce Party formed soon after her death pressuring for improved conditions for the natives of British colonies Various reform associations were formed in her honour and helped facilitate governmental change The Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine founded an honorary medal in her name In Sierra Leone the Mary Kingsley Auditorium at the Institute of African Studies Fourah Bay College University of Sierra Leone was named after her Published works edit Travels on the western coast of equatorial Africa Scottish Geographical Magazine 12 3 113 124 1896 doi 10 1080 00369229608732860 ISSN 0036 9225 Zenodo 1430411 Travels in West Africa BookRix 2015 1897 ISBN 978 3 7368 0451 7 Travels in West Africa Washington DC National Geographic 2002 1897 ISBN 9780792266389 with an Introduction by Anthony Brandt West African Studies Second expanded ed London MacMillan 1901 1899 Gallery edit nbsp Photographic portrait from Kingsley s 1901 book West African Studies published by Macmillan nbsp Photographic portrait profile nbsp Carved wooden portrait bust Ibibio sculptor Nigeria World Museum Liverpool nbsp Plate depicting the fish species Ctenopoma kingsleyae a climbing gourami named for Kingsley nbsp Holotype of the Longhorn beetle species Pseudictator kingsleyae specific name honouring Kingsley nbsp Avalon 22 Southwood Lane Highgate Kingsley s childhood home nbsp Blue plaque erected in 1975 by Greater London Council at Avalon See also editList of female adventurersReferences editCitations edit a b Mary Kingsley Facts biography yourdictionary com Retrieved 18 October 2017 a b Mary Kingsley Women in European History Retrieved 18 October 2017 a b Death of Mary Kingsley History Today Retrieved 18 October 2017 Seccombe 1892 Frank 2006 pp 37 38 a b Gwynn amp Rattray 1932 Wilcox 1975 p 173 Frank 2006 p 28 Gwynn amp Rattray 1932 p 362 Kingsley 2002 p xiv Frank 2006 p 57 Frank 2006 pp 130 131 Alexander 1990 p 254 a b Flint 1963 p 96 Flint 1963 pp 95 104 Matthew amp Harrison 2004 p 713 a b Kingsley 2002 Introduction Frank 2006 pp 157 159 Armston Sheret Edward Walker Kim December 2021 Is alcohol a tropical medicine Scientific understandings of climate stimulants and bodies in Victorian and Edwardian tropical travel The British Journal for the History of Science 54 4 476 doi 10 1017 S0007087421000649 ISSN 0007 0874 PMID 34558394 Kingsley 2002 p 454 Kingsley 1901 p 101 Review of Travels in West Africa Congo Francais Corisco and Cameroons by Mary H Kingsley The Athenaeum 3615 173 176 6 February 1897 hdl 2027 iau 31858029267667 a b Kingsley 1901 p xi Kingsley 1901 p viii Kingsley amp Kingsley 1900 p 22 Levi Strauss 1967 The War in South Africa Embarcation of Troops The Times No 36087 London 12 March 1900 p 7 a b Gwynn 1940 Matthew amp Harrison 2004 p 714 Frank 2006 pp 298 299 Sources editAlexander Caroline 1990 One dry season in the footsteps of Mary Kingsley Knopf ISBN 978 0 394 57455 4 Flint J E 1963 Mary Kingsley a reassessment The Journal of African History 4 1 95 104 doi 10 1017 S002185370000373X ISSN 0021 8537 S2CID 162460204 Frank Katherine 2006 A Voyager Out The Life of Mary Kingsley Tauris Parke ISBN 978 1 84511 020 8 Gwynn Stephen Rattray R S October 1932 The Life of Mary Kingsley Journal of the Royal African Society 31 125 354 365 JSTOR 716893 Gwynn Stephen 1940 The Life of Mary Kingsley Hammondswoth Middlesex England Penguin Books p 174 ASIN B0014IGN0S Levi Strauss Claude 1967 Tristes Tropiques an anthropological study of primitive societies in Brazil New York Atheneum Matthew H C G Harrison Brian 2004 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography In Association with the British Academy OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 861411 1 Kingsley George Henry Kingsley Mary Henrietta 1900 Notes on Sport and Travel Macmillan Seccombe Thomas 1892 Kingsley George Henry In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 31 London Smith Elder amp Co Wilcox Desmond 1975 Ten who dared Little Brown ISBN 978 0 913948 09 5 Further reading edit Bausch Richard 2009 Hello to the Cannibals A Novel New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 188208 1 A fictional account involving Mary Kingsley Birkett Dea 1992 Mary Kingsley Imperial Adventuress Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 48920 8 Birkett D J 3 January 2008 Kingsley Mary Henrietta Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 15620 Subscription or UK public library membership required Blunt Alison 1994 Travel Gender and Imperialism Mary Kingsley and West Africa Guilford Press ISBN 978 0 89862 546 2 Brisson Ulrike Fall 2005 Fish and Fetish Mary Kingsley s Studies of Fetish in West Africa Journal of Narrative Theory 35 3 326 340 doi 10 1353 jnt 2006 0009 S2CID 161641683 Davidson L C 1889 Hints to Lady Travellers London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Flint J E 1965 Mary Kingsley African Affairs 64 256 150 161 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals afraf a095373 Ingemanson Birgitta M 1993 Bonnie Frederick Sarah H McLeod eds Under Cover The Paradox of Victorian Women s Travel Costume Women and the Journey The Female Travel Experience Pullman WA Washington State University Press Lloyd Clare 1985 The Travelling Naturalists Croom Helm ISBN 978 0 7099 1658 1 A study of 18th Century Natural History includes Charles Waterton John Hanning Speke Henry Seebohm and Mary Kingsley Contains colour and black and white reproductions ISBN 0 7099 1658 2 McLoone Margo 1997 Women explorers in Africa Christina Dodwell Delia Akeley Mary Kingsley Florence von Sass Baker and Alexandrine Tinne Capstone ISBN 978 1 56065 505 3 Middleton Dorothy 1973 Some Victorian Lady Travellers The Geographical Journal 139 1 65 75 doi 10 2307 1795796 ISSN 0016 7398 JSTOR 1795796 Murray Sabina 2011 Tales of the New World Black Cat ISBN 978 0 8021 7083 5 The opening short story Fish is a fictional account of Kingsley s life Myer Valerie Grosvenor 1989 A Victorian lady in Africa the story of Mary Kingsley Ashford Buchan amp Enright ISBN 978 1 85253 099 0 Woolf Virginia 1938 Three Guineas Hogarth Press An interesting look at women race and civilization though not directly related to Mary Kingsley External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mary Kingsley nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Mary Kingsley The Royal African Society has a short biography that includes a bibliography Works by Mary Henrietta Kingsley at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Mary Kingsley at Internet Archive Works by Mary Kingsley at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Travels in West Africa at Project Gutenberg Mary H Kingsley 1862 1900 at the Tom Perry Special Collections Brigham Young University Archival material relating to Mary Kingsley UK National Archives nbsp Mary Henrietta Kingsley Papers MS 1485 Manuscripts and Archives Yale University Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mary Kingsley amp oldid 1215543193, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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