fbpx
Wikipedia

Olive Schreiner

Olive Schreiner (24 March 1855 – 11 December 1920)[1] was a South African author, anti-war campaigner and intellectual. She is best remembered today for her novel The Story of an African Farm (1883), which has been highly acclaimed. It deals boldly with such contemporary issues as agnosticism, existential independence, individualism, the professional aspirations of women, and the elemental nature of life on the colonial frontier.

Olive Schreiner
Native name
Olive Emily Albertina Schreiner
Born(1855-03-24)24 March 1855
Wittebergen Reserve, Cape Colony (in present-day Lesotho)
Died11 December 1920(1920-12-11) (aged 65)
Wynberg, South Africa
OccupationNovelist, suffragist, political activist
Notable worksThe Story of an African Farm, Woman and Labour
RelativesFrederick Samuel Schreiner (brother)

William Schreiner (brother)

Helen Schreiner (sister)
Signature

Since the late 20th century, scholars have also credited Schreiner as an advocate for the Afrikaners, and other South African groups who were excluded from political power for decades, such as indigenous blacks, Jews, and Indians. Although she showed interest in socialism, pacifism, vegetarianism, and feminism amongst other topics, her views escaped restrictive categorisations. Her published works and other surviving writings promote implicit values such as moderation, friendship, and understanding amongst all peoples, and avoid the pitfalls of political radicalism, which she consciously eschewed. Called a lifelong freethinker, she also continued to adhere to the spirit of the Christian Bible and developed a secular version of the worldview of her missionary parents, with mystical elements.

Schreiner is also known for her later novel, From Man To Man Or Perhaps Only (1926), published posthumously. She had not completed its revisions before her death. The first edition was produced by her husband, Samuel Cronwright-Schreiner. It was re-edited and published by the University of Cape Town Press (edited and introduced by Dorothy Driver). This edition corrects previous errors and provides another ending to the novel, in Schreiner's own words, in addition to her husband's summary. From Man to Man or Perhaps Only was said by Schreiner to be her favourite among her novels. From exploring white women's confinement to domestic life in colonial-era South Africa, the novel eventually expands its gaze to include black women and girls, whose presence gradually informs the central character's struggle to re-create herself and educate her children against the racism and sexism of the period.[2]

Biography edit

Karel Schoeman, a historian, and authority on Schreiner in South Africa, wrote that she was an outstanding figure in a South African context. He summarises the basic pattern of her life as follows, noting her periods of living out of the country:

From a chronological viewpoint, Olive Schreiner's life shows an interesting pattern. After she spent the first twenty-five thereof in South Africa ... she was in England for more than seven years, and also lived during this time in Europe. After this, she lived in South Africa for twenty-four years, the time of her friendship with Rhodes, the Anglo-Boer war, and her growing involvement in issues like racism and the lot of women, after which another exile followed in England for seven years; it was only shortly before her death in 1920 that she returned to South Africa. (Olive Schreiner: A Life in South Africa 1855–1881, Human & Rousseau, Cape Town, 1989)

Early life edit

 

Olive Emily Albertina Schreiner was the ninth of twelve children born to a missionary couple at the Wesleyan Missionary Society station at Wittebergen in the Eastern Cape, near Herschel in South Africa. Her parents, Gottlob Schreiner and Rebecca (née Lyndall), married in England in 1837.[3] She was named after her three older brothers, Oliver (1848–1854), Albert (1843–1843) and Emile (1852–1852), each of whom died before she was born. Her childhood was a harsh one: her father was loving and gentle, though impractical, which led to difficulties for the family; but her mother Rebecca was intent on teaching her children the same restraint and self-discipline that had been a part of her upbringing. Olive received virtually all of her initial education from her mother, who was well-read and gifted.[clarification needed]

Her eldest brother, Frederick Samuel (1841–1901), obtained a BA at London University and founded New College in Eastbourne in 1877.[4] He remained as headmaster until late 1897, but continued to run the junior school until 1901. He died in 1901 at the Grand Hotel in Eastbourne and was interred in the town.[5]

When Olive was six, her father Gottlob transferred to Healdtown in the Eastern Cape to run the Wesleyan training institute there. As with so many of his other projects, he could not manage the responsibility and was expelled in disgrace for trading against missionary regulations. He was forced to make his own living for the first time in his life and tried a business venture. Again, he failed and was insolvent within a year. The family lived in abject poverty as a result.[citation needed]

When Schreiner was nine, her sister Helen ("Ellie") died, and this had a profound effect on the survivor's outlook. Ellie was the twelfth and last child. She died at seventeen months (1864-1865).[6] Schreiner dedicated the 'Prelude' of From Man to Man to Ellie, as well as to her own daughter, who died shortly after her birth.[7]

In a number of letters, Schreiner discusses Ellie's death as a key turning point in her life. In a letter to John T. Lloyd of 1892, for instance, Schreiner commented:

"I think I first had this feeling with regard to death clearly when my favourite little sister died when I was nine years old. I slept with her little body until it was buried, & after that, I used to sit for hours by her grave It & it was as impossible for me then, as it is impossible for me now, to accept the ordinary doctrine that she was living on somewhere without a body".[8]

When her older brother, Theophilus (1844–1920), was appointed as headmaster in Cradock in 1867, Schreiner and two of their siblings went to live with him. She also attended his school, where she received formal education for the first time. But she was no happier in Cradock than she had been in Wittebergen or Healdtown. Her siblings were very religious, but, like many learned Victorians, Olive had already questioned the Christianity of her parents, and it was the cause of many arguments that she had with her family.[citation needed]

Consequently, when Theo and her brother left Cradock for the diamond fields of Griqualand West, Olive chose to become a governess. On the way to her first post at Barkly East, she met Willie Bertram, who shared her views of religion and who lent her a copy of Herbert Spencer's First Principles. This text was to have a profound impact on her. While rejecting religious creeds and doctrine, Spencer also argued for a belief in an Absolute that lay beyond the scope of human knowledge and conception. This belief was founded in the unity of nature and a teleological universe, both of which Olive was to appropriate for herself in her attempts to create a morality free of organised religion.[citation needed]

After this meeting, Olive travelled from place to place, accepting posts as a governess with various families, later leaving them because of personal conflict with her employers. One issue which always surfaced was her unusual view of religion. Her apostasy did not sit well with the traditional farm folk among whom she worked.[citation needed]

Another factor was that she was somewhat unconventional in her relationships, for she was uncertain as to how to relate sexually to her male employers in many cases, and men in general. In his study of Schreiner's character, Karel Schoeman writes:

As far as Olive's sexuality is concerned there is little known, because however open she was [as a woman] for her time, this was merely relative, and the information that may be used as the primary evidence in this regard, is included and appeared as an addendum in the case studies that appear in [Havelock] Ellis's Studies in the psychology of sex ... ("History IX", 236)

And this person, who Schoeman identifies strongly with Schreiner in agreement with other researchers, is described by Ellis as ...

[Someone who]... from girlhood experienced erotic day-dreams, imagining love-stories of which she herself was the heroine; the climax of these stories has developed with her own knowledge of sexual matters ... She regards herself as very passionate ... but her sexual emotions appear to have developed very slowly and have been somewhat intellectualised ... (Schoeman, 236, 1989)

During this time she met Julius Gau, to whom she became engaged under doubtful circumstances. For whatever reason, their engagement did not last long, and she returned to live with her parents and then with her brothers. She read widely and began writing seriously. She started Undine at this time. As in the case of her later husband, Cronwright, she may have been attracted to Gau, as to other men, for his dominant personality, maturity, and physicality:

It is obvious that she felt attracted to the towering and even possibly hypnotic personality of Gau, like that of Undine [to the character] Blair, and mistook the physical attraction for love ... [writing about this] "I was once partly in love when I was barely 15, and have never had the smallest return of that feeling though I have always desired it ..."(Schoeman, 236, 1989)

However, her brothers' financial situation soon deteriorated, as diamonds became increasingly difficult to find. Olive had no choice but to resume her transient lifestyle, moving between various households and towns, until she returned briefly to her parents in 1874. It was there that she had the first of the asthma attacks that would plague her for the rest of her life. Since her parents were no more financially secure than before and because of her ill-health, Olive was forced to resume working to support them.

Over the next few years, she accepted the position of governess at a number of farms, most notably the Fouchés, who provided inspiration for certain aspects of The Story of an African Farm, which she published under the pseudonym "Ralph Iron", as well as a small collection of stories and allegories called Dream Life and Real Life.

England and Continental Europe edit

 
16 Portsea Place, London W2, one of the several lodging places of Olive Schreiner while in London
 
Olive Schreiner in 1889 at Menton, France

However, Olive's real ambitions did not lie in the direction of writing. She had always wanted to be a doctor but had never had enough money to pay for the training. Undaunted, she decided that she would be a nurse as that did not require her to pay anything. By 1880, she had saved enough money for an overseas trip, and she applied to the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh in Scotland. In 1881, she travelled to Southampton in England. Once there, she was never to realise her dream of becoming a medical practitioner, as her ill-health prevented her from completing any form of training or studying. She was forced to concede that writing would and could be her only work in life.

Despite that, she still had a passion to heal society's ills and set out to do with her pen what she could not with pills. Her Story of an African Farm was acclaimed for the manner in which it tackled the issues of its day, ranging from agnosticism to the treatment of women. It was also the cause of one of her most significant and long-lasting friendships, as the renowned sexologist Havelock Ellis wrote to her about her novel. Their relationship soon developed beyond intellectual debate to a genuine source of support for Schreiner.

She finally met Ellis in 1884 when she went with him to a meeting of the Progressive Organisation, a group for freethinkers to discuss political and philosophical views. This was one of a number of radical discussion groups to which she was to belong and which brought her into contact with many important socialists of the time. Another friendship that would prove to be influential was with Edward Carpenter, the founder Socialist and gay rights activist, which, as Stephen Gray shows, remains hardly explored.[9] In addition to the Progressive Organisation, she also attended meetings of the Fellowship of the New Life and Karl Pearson's Men and Women's Club, where she was insistent on the critical importance of woman's equality and the need to consider men as well as women when looking at gender relationships.

However, her own relationships with men were anything but happy. She had refused a proposal from her doctor, Bryan Donkin, but he was irritatingly persistent in his suit of her. To make matters worse, despite her reservations about Karl Pearson and her intentions just to remain his friend, she soon conceived an attraction for him. He did not reciprocate her feelings, preferring Elizabeth Cobb. In London, Schreiner often found herself at odds with society's expectations of "respectable behaviour". Edward Carpenter described her as "a pretty woman of apparently lady-like origin who did not wear a veil and seldom wore gloves, and who talked and laughed even in the streets quite naturally".[10] She clashed with a succession of landlords over her frequent male visitors, and once, outside her lodgings at 16 Portsea Place near Marble Arch, she was nearly arrested as a prostitute.[11]

In 1886, she left England for Continental Europe under something of a cloud, travelling between Switzerland, France, and Italy before returning to England. During this time, she was tremendously productive, working on From Man to Man and publishing numerous allegories. She also worked on an introduction to Mary Wollstonecraft's A Vindication of the Rights of Women.

Return to South Africa edit

Given the situation in England, it is perhaps not surprising that Schreiner chose to return to South Africa, sailing back to Cape Town in 1889. The return home was unsettling for her – she felt extremely alienated from the people around her, but at the same time experienced a great affinity for the land itself. In an attempt to reconnect with her surroundings, she became increasingly involved in local politics and produced a series of articles on the land and people around her, published posthumously as Thoughts on South Africa. Through her work with local politics she became intimate friends with Emily Hobhouse and Elizabeth Maria Molteno, influential women activists with similar opinions on civil and women's rights.

Her involvement with Cape politics led her into an association with Cecil John Rhodes, with whom she would soon become disillusioned and about whom she would write her bitterly satirical allegory Trooper Peter Halket of Mashonaland. This disillusionment began with his support of the "strop bill" that would allow black and coloured servants to be flogged for relatively small offences.

Her opposition to the "strop bill" also brought her into contact with Samuel Cronwright [af], a politically active farmer. They were of the same mind on the "Native Question" and on Rhodes, and Schreiner soon fell in love with him. During a brief visit to England in 1893, she discussed with her friends the possibility of marrying him, although she was concerned that she would find marriage restrictive. She put aside these doubts, however, and they were married in 1894, after which they settled at Cronwright's farm.

The next few years were difficult and unsettled ones for them. Schreiner's worsening health forced the couple to move constantly, while her first and only child, a daughter, died within a day. This loss was worsened by the fact that all her other pregnancies would end in miscarriages. However, she found solace in work, publishing a pamphlet with her husband on the political situation in 1896 and Trooper Peter Halket of Mashonaland the next year. Both of these isolated her from her family and the people around her, and she experienced long spells of loneliness during this period of her life.

In 1898, the couple moved to Johannesburg for health reasons. In the aftermath of the Jameson Raid, they were seen as the champions of the Republican cause in the face of the inevitable war between Boer and British. Schreiner tried to persuade South African officials to turn away from the path of war, and, when that failed, wrote The South African Question by an English South African in an attempt to open the English public's eyes to the reality of the situation. That was equally unsuccessful, but Schreiner was undaunted. Throughout the war, she continued to defend Boer interests and argue for peace, as did her brother William Philip Schreiner, even though she was suffering physically and psychologically and all her efforts only met with ridicule. As a means of distraction, she began reworking the "sex book" she had started in England into Woman and Labour, which is the best expression of her characteristic concerns with socialism and gender equality. Driven by her prophetic vision of a non-racist, non-sexist South Africa, during the Boer War Schreiner lived in the tiny hamlet of Hanover, virtually a British army camp.

The last few years of Schreiner's life were marked by ill-health and an increasing sense of isolation. Despite this, she still engaged in politics and was determined to make her mark on a new constitution, especially through works like Closer Union. In this polemic, she argued for more rights not only for blacks but also for women. She also joined the newly founded Cape Branch of the Women's Enfranchisement League in 1907, becoming its vice-president. However, she refused to lend her support to it any longer when other branches wished to exclude black women from the vote.

Final days edit

When Woman and Labour was finally published in 1911, Schreiner was severely ill, her asthma worsened by attacks of angina. Two years later, she sailed alone to England for treatment but was trapped there by the outbreak of World War I. During this time, her primary interest was in pacifism – she was in contact with Gandhi and other prominent activists like Emily Hobhouse and Elizabeth Maria Molteno – and she started a book on war, which was abbreviated and published as The Dawn of Civilisation. This was the last book she was to write. After the war, she returned home to the Cape, where she died in her sleep in a boarding house in 1920. She was buried later in Kimberley. After the death of her husband, Samuel Cronwright, her body was exhumed, and along with her baby, dog and husband, she was reburied atop Buffelskop mountain, on the farm known as Buffelshoek, near Cradock, in the Eastern Cape.

Selected works edit

  • The Story of an African Farm, 1883 (as "Ralph Iron")
  • Dreams, 1890
  • Dream Life and Real Life, 1893
  • The Political Situation in Cape Colony, 1895 (with S. C. Cronwright-Schreiner)
  • Three dreams in a desert. Under a mimosa-tree, 1897
  • Trooper Peter Halket of Mashonaland, 1897
  • The South African question. By an English South African, 1899
  • An English South African Woman's View of the Situation, a critique on the Transvaal difficulty from the pro-Boer position, 1899
  • So Here Then are Dreams], 1901
  • A Letter on the Jew, 1906
  • Closer Union: a Letter on South African Union and the Principles of Government, 1909
  • So Here Then are Dreams, 1901
  • Woman and Labour, 1911
  • Woman and war, 1914
  • Who Knocks at the Door?, 1918
  • The Dawn of Civilisation, 1921
  • Thoughts on South Africa], 1923. Posthumously
  • Stories, Dreams and Allegories], 1923. Posthumously
  • From Man to Man Or Perhaps Only ...], 1926. Posthumously
  • Undine, 1929. Posthumously

Correspondence edit

The Olive Schreiner Letters Online[12] database is a collection of over 5,000 extant letters written to or from Schreiner. The letters cover a diverse range of topics from South African political history, 'New Women' writers, international social movements, to feminist social theory. The OSLO edition provides; full diplomatic transcriptions, including omissions, insertions, and 'mistakes'; extensive full-text search facilities; topic collections of Schreiner letters; a 'dramatis personae' providing bibliographical information on Schreiner's correspondents and many other people mentioned in her letters; new collections of letters as they become available; detailed information on all Schreiner's publications, including in journals and newspapers, as well as books; and downloadable publications from the OSLO research team.

Audio book edit

"In a far off world"
  • Story of an African Farm[13]

Recent scholarship edit

  • Carolyn Burdett's Olive Schreiner (Oxford University Press, 2013) ISBN 0746310935, 9780746310939
  • Liz Stanley, Andrea Salter & Helen Dampier (2013), 'Olive Schreiner, Epistolary Practices and Microhistories, Cultural and Social History, 10:4, 577–597.[14]
  • Stanley, L., Salter, A., & Dampier, H. (2013), 'The Work of Making and the Work it Does: Cultural Sociology and 'Bringing- Into-Being' the Cultural Assemblage of the Olive Schreiner Letters' in Cultural Sociology 7(3), 287–302.[15]
  • 'I Just Express My Views & Leave Them to Work': Olive Schreiner as a Feminist Protagonist in a Masculine Political Landscape with Figures' by Liz Stanley and Helen Dampier. Published in Gender and History, Vol. 24, Issue 3 (November 2012).[16]
  • Helen Dampier's article, 'Re-Readings of Olive Schreiner's Letters to Karl Pearson: Against Closure', OSLP Working Papers on Letters, Letterness & Epistolary Networks No 3, University of Edinburgh, pp. 46–71
  • 'Olive Schreiner Globalising Social Inquiry: A Feminist Analytics of Globalization' by Stanley, L., Dampier, H., & Salter, A. in The Sociological Review (2010) 58(4), 656–679.[17]
  • '"Her letters cut are generally nothing of interest": the Heterotopic Persona of Olive Schreiner and the Alterity-Persona of Cronwright-Schreiner', an article by Liz Stanley and Andrea Salter in English in Africa, Volume 36, Number 2, 1 October 2009, pp. 7–30(24).[18]
  • Ann Heilmans' New Woman Strategies: Sarah Grand, Olive Schreiner, and Mona Caird (Manchester University Press, 2004) ISBN 0719057590, 9780719057595
  • Article by John Kucich: 'Olive Schreiner, Masochism, and Omnipotence: Strategies of a Preoedipal Politics' in Novel: A Forum on Fiction (2002) 36 (1): 79.[19]
  • Liz Stanley's article, 'Shadows lying across her pages: epistolary aspects of reading 'the eventful I' in Olive Schreiner's letters' in Journal of European Studies (2002).[20]
  • Olive Schreiner and the Progress of Feminism: Evolution, Gender and Empire by Carolyn Burdett (Springer, 2001) ISBN 0230598978, 9780230598973
  • Paula M. Krebs' article, 'Olive Schreiner's Racialization of South Africa' in Victorian Studies Vol. 40, No. 3 (Spring, 1997), pp. 427–444 (18 pages).[21]
  • Fictions of the Female Self: Charlotte Bronte, Olive Schreiner, Katherine Mansfield by Ruth Parkin-Gounelas (Springer 1991) ISBN 0230378250, 9780230378254
  • Mark James Perry's thesis The life of Olive Schreiner: a psychobiography. University of the Free State (31 July 2012).[22]

See also edit

  • Olive Schreiner Prize - an award named in her honour
  • Heretics,[23] a collection of essays by G.K. Chesterton published in 1905, who praises her as "a fierce, brilliant, and realistic novelist... Her literary kinship is with the pessimistic fiction of the continent; with the novelists whose very pity is cruel. Olive Schreiner is the one English colonial who is not conventional" in his diatribe on English Colonization.

References edit

  1. ^ "Olive Schreiner | South African writer | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 11 December 2021.
  2. ^ "How Olive Schreiner's husband 'carelessly' edited her lesser-known novel From Man to Man, or Perhaps Only". Time Books Live. Times Media Group. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  3. ^ "FreeBMD". Retrieved 26 July 2013. Marriages Dec 1837, Shoreditch, Volume 2, Page 371
  4. ^ "Dramatis Personae Frederick Schreiner". The Olive Schreiner Letters Online. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  5. ^ Eastbourne Local History Society Journal (168), Summer 2013.
  6. ^ "Dramatis Personae Ellie Schreiner". The Olive Schreiner Letters Online. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  7. ^ "From Man to Man". gutenberg.net.au. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  8. ^ "Olive Schreiner: J.T. Lloyd MSC 26/2.5.1". The Olive Schreiner Letters Online. 29 October 1892. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  9. ^ Gray, Stephen. 2013. Two Dissident Dream-Walkers: The Hardly Explored Reformist Alliance between Olive Schreiner and Edward Carpenter. English Academy Review: Southern African Journal of English Studies Volume 30, Issue 2, 2013.
  10. ^ First, Ruth and Scott, Ann. Olive Schreiner (1980) p 161
  11. ^ Sutherland, Gillian. In Search of the New Woman: Middle-Class Women and Work in Britain 1870–1914 (2015) p 79
  12. ^ "Olive Schreiner Letters Online". www.oliveschreiner.org. Retrieved 14 August 2019.
  13. ^ "The Story of an African Farm". 16 April 2010. Retrieved 14 August 2019 – via Internet Archive.
  14. ^ Stanley, Liz; Salter, Andrea; Dampier, Helen (December 2013). "Olive Schreiner, Epistolary Practices and Microhistories: A Cultural Entrepreneur in a Historical Landscape". Cultural and Social History. 10 (4): 577–597. doi:10.2752/147800413X13727009732245. ISSN 1478-0038. S2CID 144443970.
  15. ^ Stanley, Liz; Salter, Andrea; Dampier, Helen (26 February 2013). "The Work of Making and the Work it Does: Cultural Sociology and 'Bringing- Into-Being' the Cultural Assemblage of the Olive Schreiner Letters". Cultural Sociology. 7 (3): 287–302. doi:10.1177/1749975512473463. ISSN 1749-9755. S2CID 146649101.
  16. ^ Stanley, Liz; Dampier, Helen (2012). "'I Just Express My Views & Leave Them to Work': Olive Schreiner as a Feminist Protagonist in a Masculine Political Landscape with Figures" (PDF). Gender & History. 24 (3): 677–700. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0424.2012.01701.x. ISSN 1468-0424. S2CID 76654578.
  17. ^ Stanley, Liz; Dampier, Helen; Salter, Andrea (November 2010). "Olive Schreiner Globalising Social Inquiry: A Feminist Analytics of Globalization" (PDF). The Sociological Review. 58 (4): 656–679. doi:10.1111/j.1467-954x.2010.01945.x. hdl:20.500.11820/07de75f3-c764-4e9b-bdc4-1537386c135e. ISSN 0038-0261. S2CID 142961139.
  18. ^ Stanley, Liz; Salter, Andrea (1 October 2009). ""Her letters cut are generally nothing of interest" : the Heterotopic Persona of Olive Schreiner and the Alterity-Persona of Cronwright-Schreiner". www.ingentaconnect.com. Retrieved 10 July 2019.
  19. ^ Kucich, John (2002). "Olive Schreiner, Masochism, and Omnipotence: Strategies of a Preoedipal Politics". Novel: A Forum on Fiction. 36 (1): 79–109. doi:10.2307/1346116. JSTOR 1346116. S2CID 18349754.
  20. ^ Stanley, Liz (27 July 2016). "Shadows lying across her pages: epistolary aspects of reading 'the eventful I' in Olive Schreiner's letters". Journal of European Studies. 32 (125–126): 251–266. doi:10.1177/004724410203212512. S2CID 162921115.
  21. ^ Krebs, Paula M. (1997). "Olive Schreiner's Racialization of South Africa". Victorian Studies. 40 (3): 427–444. ISSN 0042-5222. JSTOR 3829293.
  22. ^ Perry, Mark James (31 July 2012). The life of Olive Schreiner: a psychobiography (Thesis thesis). University of the Free State.
  23. ^ "The Project Gutenberg E-text of Heretics, by Gilbert K. Chesterton". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 10 April 2020.

External links edit

  •   Works by or about Olive Schreiner at Wikisource
  • South African biography of Schreiner 28 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine at zar.co.za
  • One of the places where Schreiner lived in South Africa: Cradock 22 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine at www.places.co.za
  • Timeline of Schreiner's life at www.google.co.za
  • Schreiner's thinking on women remembered in authentic South African context 18 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine at heritage.thetimes.co.za
  • Works by Olive Schreiner at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Olive Schreiner at Internet Archive
  • Works by Olive Schreiner at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Biography by Carolyn Burdett, University of North London
  • A Chronology of Olive Schreiner
  • Olive Schreiner quotes
  • Olive Schreiner Letters Online
  • Schreiner, Olive. Undine. With an Introduction by S.C. Cronwright-Schreiner New York And London: Harper & Bros, 1928. Victorian Women Writers Project
  • "Archival material relating to Olive Schreiner". UK National Archives.  
  • Olive Schreiner at Library of Congress, with 79 library catalogue records

olive, schreiner, march, 1855, december, 1920, south, african, author, anti, campaigner, intellectual, best, remembered, today, novel, story, african, farm, 1883, which, been, highly, acclaimed, deals, boldly, with, such, contemporary, issues, agnosticism, exi. Olive Schreiner 24 March 1855 11 December 1920 1 was a South African author anti war campaigner and intellectual She is best remembered today for her novel The Story of an African Farm 1883 which has been highly acclaimed It deals boldly with such contemporary issues as agnosticism existential independence individualism the professional aspirations of women and the elemental nature of life on the colonial frontier Olive SchreinerNative nameOlive Emily Albertina SchreinerBorn 1855 03 24 24 March 1855Wittebergen Reserve Cape Colony in present day Lesotho Died11 December 1920 1920 12 11 aged 65 Wynberg South AfricaOccupationNovelist suffragist political activistNotable worksThe Story of an African Farm Woman and LabourRelativesFrederick Samuel Schreiner brother William Schreiner brother Helen Schreiner sister SignatureSince the late 20th century scholars have also credited Schreiner as an advocate for the Afrikaners and other South African groups who were excluded from political power for decades such as indigenous blacks Jews and Indians Although she showed interest in socialism pacifism vegetarianism and feminism amongst other topics her views escaped restrictive categorisations Her published works and other surviving writings promote implicit values such as moderation friendship and understanding amongst all peoples and avoid the pitfalls of political radicalism which she consciously eschewed Called a lifelong freethinker she also continued to adhere to the spirit of the Christian Bible and developed a secular version of the worldview of her missionary parents with mystical elements Schreiner is also known for her later novel From Man To Man Or Perhaps Only 1926 published posthumously She had not completed its revisions before her death The first edition was produced by her husband Samuel Cronwright Schreiner It was re edited and published by the University of Cape Town Press edited and introduced by Dorothy Driver This edition corrects previous errors and provides another ending to the novel in Schreiner s own words in addition to her husband s summary From Man to Man or Perhaps Only was said by Schreiner to be her favourite among her novels From exploring white women s confinement to domestic life in colonial era South Africa the novel eventually expands its gaze to include black women and girls whose presence gradually informs the central character s struggle to re create herself and educate her children against the racism and sexism of the period 2 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 England and Continental Europe 1 3 Return to South Africa 1 4 Final days 2 Selected works 3 Correspondence 4 Audio book 5 Recent scholarship 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBiography editKarel Schoeman a historian and authority on Schreiner in South Africa wrote that she was an outstanding figure in a South African context He summarises the basic pattern of her life as follows noting her periods of living out of the country From a chronological viewpoint Olive Schreiner s life shows an interesting pattern After she spent the first twenty five thereof in South Africa she was in England for more than seven years and also lived during this time in Europe After this she lived in South Africa for twenty four years the time of her friendship with Rhodes the Anglo Boer war and her growing involvement in issues like racism and the lot of women after which another exile followed in England for seven years it was only shortly before her death in 1920 that she returned to South Africa Olive Schreiner A Life in South Africa 1855 1881 Human amp Rousseau Cape Town 1989 Early life edit nbsp Olive Emily Albertina Schreiner was the ninth of twelve children born to a missionary couple at the Wesleyan Missionary Society station at Wittebergen in the Eastern Cape near Herschel in South Africa Her parents Gottlob Schreiner and Rebecca nee Lyndall married in England in 1837 3 She was named after her three older brothers Oliver 1848 1854 Albert 1843 1843 and Emile 1852 1852 each of whom died before she was born Her childhood was a harsh one her father was loving and gentle though impractical which led to difficulties for the family but her mother Rebecca was intent on teaching her children the same restraint and self discipline that had been a part of her upbringing Olive received virtually all of her initial education from her mother who was well read and gifted clarification needed Her eldest brother Frederick Samuel 1841 1901 obtained a BA at London University and founded New College in Eastbourne in 1877 4 He remained as headmaster until late 1897 but continued to run the junior school until 1901 He died in 1901 at the Grand Hotel in Eastbourne and was interred in the town 5 When Olive was six her father Gottlob transferred to Healdtown in the Eastern Cape to run the Wesleyan training institute there As with so many of his other projects he could not manage the responsibility and was expelled in disgrace for trading against missionary regulations He was forced to make his own living for the first time in his life and tried a business venture Again he failed and was insolvent within a year The family lived in abject poverty as a result citation needed When Schreiner was nine her sister Helen Ellie died and this had a profound effect on the survivor s outlook Ellie was the twelfth and last child She died at seventeen months 1864 1865 6 Schreiner dedicated the Prelude of From Man to Man to Ellie as well as to her own daughter who died shortly after her birth 7 In a number of letters Schreiner discusses Ellie s death as a key turning point in her life In a letter to John T Lloyd of 1892 for instance Schreiner commented I think I first had this feeling with regard to death clearly when my favourite little sister died when I was nine years old I slept with her little body until it was buried amp after that I used to sit for hours by her grave It amp it was as impossible for me then as it is impossible for me now to accept the ordinary doctrine that she was living on somewhere without a body 8 When her older brother Theophilus 1844 1920 was appointed as headmaster in Cradock in 1867 Schreiner and two of their siblings went to live with him She also attended his school where she received formal education for the first time But she was no happier in Cradock than she had been in Wittebergen or Healdtown Her siblings were very religious but like many learned Victorians Olive had already questioned the Christianity of her parents and it was the cause of many arguments that she had with her family citation needed Consequently when Theo and her brother left Cradock for the diamond fields of Griqualand West Olive chose to become a governess On the way to her first post at Barkly East she met Willie Bertram who shared her views of religion and who lent her a copy of Herbert Spencer s First Principles This text was to have a profound impact on her While rejecting religious creeds and doctrine Spencer also argued for a belief in an Absolute that lay beyond the scope of human knowledge and conception This belief was founded in the unity of nature and a teleological universe both of which Olive was to appropriate for herself in her attempts to create a morality free of organised religion citation needed After this meeting Olive travelled from place to place accepting posts as a governess with various families later leaving them because of personal conflict with her employers One issue which always surfaced was her unusual view of religion Her apostasy did not sit well with the traditional farm folk among whom she worked citation needed Another factor was that she was somewhat unconventional in her relationships for she was uncertain as to how to relate sexually to her male employers in many cases and men in general In his study of Schreiner s character Karel Schoeman writes As far as Olive s sexuality is concerned there is little known because however open she was as a woman for her time this was merely relative and the information that may be used as the primary evidence in this regard is included and appeared as an addendum in the case studies that appear in Havelock Ellis s Studies in the psychology of sex History IX 236 And this person who Schoeman identifies strongly with Schreiner in agreement with other researchers is described by Ellis as Someone who from girlhood experienced erotic day dreams imagining love stories of which she herself was the heroine the climax of these stories has developed with her own knowledge of sexual matters She regards herself as very passionate but her sexual emotions appear to have developed very slowly and have been somewhat intellectualised Schoeman 236 1989 During this time she met Julius Gau to whom she became engaged under doubtful circumstances For whatever reason their engagement did not last long and she returned to live with her parents and then with her brothers She read widely and began writing seriously She started Undine at this time As in the case of her later husband Cronwright she may have been attracted to Gau as to other men for his dominant personality maturity and physicality It is obvious that she felt attracted to the towering and even possibly hypnotic personality of Gau like that of Undine to the character Blair and mistook the physical attraction for love writing about this I was once partly in love when I was barely 15 and have never had the smallest return of that feeling though I have always desired it Schoeman 236 1989 However her brothers financial situation soon deteriorated as diamonds became increasingly difficult to find Olive had no choice but to resume her transient lifestyle moving between various households and towns until she returned briefly to her parents in 1874 It was there that she had the first of the asthma attacks that would plague her for the rest of her life Since her parents were no more financially secure than before and because of her ill health Olive was forced to resume working to support them Over the next few years she accepted the position of governess at a number of farms most notably the Fouches who provided inspiration for certain aspects of The Story of an African Farm which she published under the pseudonym Ralph Iron as well as a small collection of stories and allegories called Dream Life and Real Life England and Continental Europe edit nbsp 16 Portsea Place London W2 one of the several lodging places of Olive Schreiner while in London nbsp Olive Schreiner in 1889 at Menton FranceHowever Olive s real ambitions did not lie in the direction of writing She had always wanted to be a doctor but had never had enough money to pay for the training Undaunted she decided that she would be a nurse as that did not require her to pay anything By 1880 she had saved enough money for an overseas trip and she applied to the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh in Scotland In 1881 she travelled to Southampton in England Once there she was never to realise her dream of becoming a medical practitioner as her ill health prevented her from completing any form of training or studying She was forced to concede that writing would and could be her only work in life Despite that she still had a passion to heal society s ills and set out to do with her pen what she could not with pills Her Story of an African Farm was acclaimed for the manner in which it tackled the issues of its day ranging from agnosticism to the treatment of women It was also the cause of one of her most significant and long lasting friendships as the renowned sexologist Havelock Ellis wrote to her about her novel Their relationship soon developed beyond intellectual debate to a genuine source of support for Schreiner She finally met Ellis in 1884 when she went with him to a meeting of the Progressive Organisation a group for freethinkers to discuss political and philosophical views This was one of a number of radical discussion groups to which she was to belong and which brought her into contact with many important socialists of the time Another friendship that would prove to be influential was with Edward Carpenter the founder Socialist and gay rights activist which as Stephen Gray shows remains hardly explored 9 In addition to the Progressive Organisation she also attended meetings of the Fellowship of the New Life and Karl Pearson s Men and Women s Club where she was insistent on the critical importance of woman s equality and the need to consider men as well as women when looking at gender relationships However her own relationships with men were anything but happy She had refused a proposal from her doctor Bryan Donkin but he was irritatingly persistent in his suit of her To make matters worse despite her reservations about Karl Pearson and her intentions just to remain his friend she soon conceived an attraction for him He did not reciprocate her feelings preferring Elizabeth Cobb In London Schreiner often found herself at odds with society s expectations of respectable behaviour Edward Carpenter described her as a pretty woman of apparently lady like origin who did not wear a veil and seldom wore gloves and who talked and laughed even in the streets quite naturally 10 She clashed with a succession of landlords over her frequent male visitors and once outside her lodgings at 16 Portsea Place near Marble Arch she was nearly arrested as a prostitute 11 In 1886 she left England for Continental Europe under something of a cloud travelling between Switzerland France and Italy before returning to England During this time she was tremendously productive working on From Man to Man and publishing numerous allegories She also worked on an introduction to Mary Wollstonecraft s A Vindication of the Rights of Women Return to South Africa edit Given the situation in England it is perhaps not surprising that Schreiner chose to return to South Africa sailing back to Cape Town in 1889 The return home was unsettling for her she felt extremely alienated from the people around her but at the same time experienced a great affinity for the land itself In an attempt to reconnect with her surroundings she became increasingly involved in local politics and produced a series of articles on the land and people around her published posthumously as Thoughts on South Africa Through her work with local politics she became intimate friends with Emily Hobhouse and Elizabeth Maria Molteno influential women activists with similar opinions on civil and women s rights Her involvement with Cape politics led her into an association with Cecil John Rhodes with whom she would soon become disillusioned and about whom she would write her bitterly satirical allegory Trooper Peter Halket of Mashonaland This disillusionment began with his support of the strop bill that would allow black and coloured servants to be flogged for relatively small offences Her opposition to the strop bill also brought her into contact with Samuel Cronwright af a politically active farmer They were of the same mind on the Native Question and on Rhodes and Schreiner soon fell in love with him During a brief visit to England in 1893 she discussed with her friends the possibility of marrying him although she was concerned that she would find marriage restrictive She put aside these doubts however and they were married in 1894 after which they settled at Cronwright s farm The next few years were difficult and unsettled ones for them Schreiner s worsening health forced the couple to move constantly while her first and only child a daughter died within a day This loss was worsened by the fact that all her other pregnancies would end in miscarriages However she found solace in work publishing a pamphlet with her husband on the political situation in 1896 and Trooper Peter Halket of Mashonaland the next year Both of these isolated her from her family and the people around her and she experienced long spells of loneliness during this period of her life In 1898 the couple moved to Johannesburg for health reasons In the aftermath of the Jameson Raid they were seen as the champions of the Republican cause in the face of the inevitable war between Boer and British Schreiner tried to persuade South African officials to turn away from the path of war and when that failed wrote The South African Question by an English South African in an attempt to open the English public s eyes to the reality of the situation That was equally unsuccessful but Schreiner was undaunted Throughout the war she continued to defend Boer interests and argue for peace as did her brother William Philip Schreiner even though she was suffering physically and psychologically and all her efforts only met with ridicule As a means of distraction she began reworking the sex book she had started in England into Woman and Labour which is the best expression of her characteristic concerns with socialism and gender equality Driven by her prophetic vision of a non racist non sexist South Africa during the Boer War Schreiner lived in the tiny hamlet of Hanover virtually a British army camp The last few years of Schreiner s life were marked by ill health and an increasing sense of isolation Despite this she still engaged in politics and was determined to make her mark on a new constitution especially through works like Closer Union In this polemic she argued for more rights not only for blacks but also for women She also joined the newly founded Cape Branch of the Women s Enfranchisement League in 1907 becoming its vice president However she refused to lend her support to it any longer when other branches wished to exclude black women from the vote Final days edit When Woman and Labour was finally published in 1911 Schreiner was severely ill her asthma worsened by attacks of angina Two years later she sailed alone to England for treatment but was trapped there by the outbreak of World War I During this time her primary interest was in pacifism she was in contact with Gandhi and other prominent activists like Emily Hobhouse and Elizabeth Maria Molteno and she started a book on war which was abbreviated and published as The Dawn of Civilisation This was the last book she was to write After the war she returned home to the Cape where she died in her sleep in a boarding house in 1920 She was buried later in Kimberley After the death of her husband Samuel Cronwright her body was exhumed and along with her baby dog and husband she was reburied atop Buffelskop mountain on the farm known as Buffelshoek near Cradock in the Eastern Cape Selected works editThe Story of an African Farm 1883 as Ralph Iron Dreams 1890 Dream Life and Real Life 1893 The Political Situation in Cape Colony 1895 with S C Cronwright Schreiner Three dreams in a desert Under a mimosa tree 1897 Trooper Peter Halket of Mashonaland 1897 The South African question By an English South African 1899 An English South African Woman s View of the Situation a critique on the Transvaal difficulty from the pro Boer position 1899 So Here Then are Dreams 1901 A Letter on the Jew 1906 Closer Union a Letter on South African Union and the Principles of Government 1909 So Here Then are Dreams 1901 Woman and Labour 1911 Woman and war 1914 Who Knocks at the Door 1918 The Dawn of Civilisation 1921 Thoughts on South Africa 1923 Posthumously Stories Dreams and Allegories 1923 Posthumously From Man to Man Or Perhaps Only 1926 Posthumously Undine 1929 PosthumouslyCorrespondence editThe Olive Schreiner Letters Online 12 database is a collection of over 5 000 extant letters written to or from Schreiner The letters cover a diverse range of topics from South African political history New Women writers international social movements to feminist social theory The OSLO edition provides full diplomatic transcriptions including omissions insertions and mistakes extensive full text search facilities topic collections of Schreiner letters a dramatis personae providing bibliographical information on Schreiner s correspondents and many other people mentioned in her letters new collections of letters as they become available detailed information on all Schreiner s publications including in journals and newspapers as well as books and downloadable publications from the OSLO research team Audio book edit source source In a far off world Story of an African Farm 13 Recent scholarship editCarolyn Burdett s Olive Schreiner Oxford University Press 2013 ISBN 0746310935 9780746310939 Liz Stanley Andrea Salter amp Helen Dampier 2013 Olive Schreiner Epistolary Practices and Microhistories Cultural and Social History 10 4 577 597 14 Stanley L Salter A amp Dampier H 2013 The Work of Making and the Work it Does Cultural Sociology and Bringing Into Being the Cultural Assemblage of the Olive Schreiner Letters in Cultural Sociology 7 3 287 302 15 I Just Express My Views amp Leave Them to Work Olive Schreiner as a Feminist Protagonist in a Masculine Political Landscape with Figures by Liz Stanley and Helen Dampier Published in Gender and History Vol 24 Issue 3 November 2012 16 Helen Dampier s article Re Readings of Olive Schreiner s Letters to Karl Pearson Against Closure OSLP Working Papers on Letters Letterness amp Epistolary Networks No 3 University of Edinburgh pp 46 71 Olive Schreiner Globalising Social Inquiry A Feminist Analytics of Globalization by Stanley L Dampier H amp Salter A in The Sociological Review 2010 58 4 656 679 17 Her letters cut are generally nothing of interest the Heterotopic Persona of Olive Schreiner and the Alterity Persona of Cronwright Schreiner an article by Liz Stanley and Andrea Salter in English in Africa Volume 36 Number 2 1 October 2009 pp 7 30 24 18 Ann Heilmans New Woman Strategies Sarah Grand Olive Schreiner and Mona Caird Manchester University Press 2004 ISBN 0719057590 9780719057595 Article by John Kucich Olive Schreiner Masochism and Omnipotence Strategies of a Preoedipal Politics in Novel A Forum on Fiction 2002 36 1 79 19 Liz Stanley s article Shadows lying across her pages epistolary aspects of reading the eventful I in Olive Schreiner s letters in Journal of European Studies 2002 20 Olive Schreiner and the Progress of Feminism Evolution Gender and Empire by Carolyn Burdett Springer 2001 ISBN 0230598978 9780230598973 Paula M Krebs article Olive Schreiner s Racialization of South Africa in Victorian Studies Vol 40 No 3 Spring 1997 pp 427 444 18 pages 21 Fictions of the Female Self Charlotte Bronte Olive Schreiner Katherine Mansfield by Ruth Parkin Gounelas Springer 1991 ISBN 0230378250 9780230378254 Mark James Perry s thesis The life of Olive Schreiner a psychobiography University of the Free State 31 July 2012 22 See also editOlive Schreiner Prize an award named in her honour Heretics 23 a collection of essays by G K Chesterton published in 1905 who praises her as a fierce brilliant and realistic novelist Her literary kinship is with the pessimistic fiction of the continent with the novelists whose very pity is cruel Olive Schreiner is the one English colonial who is not conventional in his diatribe on English Colonization References edit Olive Schreiner South African writer Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 11 December 2021 How Olive Schreiner s husband carelessly edited her lesser known novel From Man to Man or Perhaps Only Time Books Live Times Media Group Retrieved 2 February 2016 FreeBMD Retrieved 26 July 2013 Marriages Dec 1837 Shoreditch Volume 2 Page 371 Dramatis Personae Frederick Schreiner The Olive Schreiner Letters Online Retrieved 10 July 2019 Eastbourne Local History Society Journal 168 Summer 2013 Dramatis Personae Ellie Schreiner The Olive Schreiner Letters Online Retrieved 10 July 2019 From Man to Man gutenberg net au Retrieved 10 July 2019 Olive Schreiner J T Lloyd MSC 26 2 5 1 The Olive Schreiner Letters Online 29 October 1892 Retrieved 10 July 2019 Gray Stephen 2013 Two Dissident Dream Walkers The Hardly Explored Reformist Alliance between Olive Schreiner and Edward Carpenter English Academy Review Southern African Journal of English Studies Volume 30 Issue 2 2013 First Ruth and Scott Ann Olive Schreiner 1980 p 161 Sutherland Gillian In Search of the New Woman Middle Class Women and Work in Britain 1870 1914 2015 p 79 Olive Schreiner Letters Online www oliveschreiner org Retrieved 14 August 2019 The Story of an African Farm 16 April 2010 Retrieved 14 August 2019 via Internet Archive Stanley Liz Salter Andrea Dampier Helen December 2013 Olive Schreiner Epistolary Practices and Microhistories A Cultural Entrepreneur in a Historical Landscape Cultural and Social History 10 4 577 597 doi 10 2752 147800413X13727009732245 ISSN 1478 0038 S2CID 144443970 Stanley Liz Salter Andrea Dampier Helen 26 February 2013 The Work of Making and the Work it Does Cultural Sociology and Bringing Into Being the Cultural Assemblage of the Olive Schreiner Letters Cultural Sociology 7 3 287 302 doi 10 1177 1749975512473463 ISSN 1749 9755 S2CID 146649101 Stanley Liz Dampier Helen 2012 I Just Express My Views amp Leave Them to Work Olive Schreiner as a Feminist Protagonist in a Masculine Political Landscape with Figures PDF Gender amp History 24 3 677 700 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0424 2012 01701 x ISSN 1468 0424 S2CID 76654578 Stanley Liz Dampier Helen Salter Andrea November 2010 Olive Schreiner Globalising Social Inquiry A Feminist Analytics of Globalization PDF The Sociological Review 58 4 656 679 doi 10 1111 j 1467 954x 2010 01945 x hdl 20 500 11820 07de75f3 c764 4e9b bdc4 1537386c135e ISSN 0038 0261 S2CID 142961139 Stanley Liz Salter Andrea 1 October 2009 Her letters cut are generally nothing of interest the Heterotopic Persona of Olive Schreiner and the Alterity Persona of Cronwright Schreiner www ingentaconnect com Retrieved 10 July 2019 Kucich John 2002 Olive Schreiner Masochism and Omnipotence Strategies of a Preoedipal Politics Novel A Forum on Fiction 36 1 79 109 doi 10 2307 1346116 JSTOR 1346116 S2CID 18349754 Stanley Liz 27 July 2016 Shadows lying across her pages epistolary aspects of reading the eventful I in Olive Schreiner s letters Journal of European Studies 32 125 126 251 266 doi 10 1177 004724410203212512 S2CID 162921115 Krebs Paula M 1997 Olive Schreiner s Racialization of South Africa Victorian Studies 40 3 427 444 ISSN 0042 5222 JSTOR 3829293 Perry Mark James 31 July 2012 The life of Olive Schreiner a psychobiography Thesis thesis University of the Free State The Project Gutenberg E text of Heretics by Gilbert K Chesterton www gutenberg org Retrieved 10 April 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Olive Schreiner nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Olive Schreiner nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Olive Emily Albertina Schreiner nbsp Works by or about Olive Schreiner at Wikisource South African biography of Schreiner Archived 28 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine at zar co za One of the places where Schreiner lived in South Africa Cradock Archived 22 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine at www places co za Timeline of Schreiner s life at www google co za Schreiner s thinking on women remembered in authentic South African context Archived 18 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine at heritage thetimes co za Works by Olive Schreiner at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Olive Schreiner at Internet Archive Works by Olive Schreiner at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Biography by Carolyn Burdett University of North London A Chronology of Olive Schreiner Olive Schreiner quotes Olive Schreiner Letters Online Schreiner Olive Undine With an Introduction by S C Cronwright Schreiner New York And London Harper amp Bros 1928 Victorian Women Writers Project Archival material relating to Olive Schreiner UK National Archives nbsp Olive Schreiner at Library of Congress with 79 library catalogue records Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olive Schreiner amp oldid 1190477222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.