Woman and War (UNABRIDGED)

Woman and War (UNABRIDGED)

Title: Woman and War (UNABRIDGED)
Author: Olive Schreiner
Release: 2021-09-08
Kind: audiobook
Genre: Mysteries & Thrillers
Preview Intro
1
Woman and War (UNABRIDGED) Olive Schreiner
"Olive Schreiner was a South African writer born in 1855 to missionary parents in the Eastern Cape. She is credited with being the first Internationally famous South African Novelist. She was an extraordinary person and was one of the earliest campaigners for women's rights, including the right to equal pay for equal work, saying: ""The fact that for equal work equally well performed by a man and by a woman it is ordained that the woman on the ground of her sex alone shall receive a less recompense is the nearest approach to a willful and unqualified ""wrong"" in the whole relation of woman to society today"". She opposed racism of all kinds whether against the Boers or Black People and she was also a pacifist and anti-war campaigner. She was a vociferous critic of British Imperialism in South Africa and of Cecil Rhodes and his policies while prime minister of the Cape. As a result of her public support for the Boers, all her manuscripts and her house were burned by the British during the Anglo-Boer War and she was interned in a concentration camp for several years. Her most well known book is ""The Story of an African Farm"" from 1883, in which her own free thinking and progressive views on equality, sexuality and marriage are explored. It became a best seller in Europe and The United States, praised by feminists for portraying a strong heroine in control of her own destiny. The book was originally published under a pseudonym and it was only eight years later with the publication of the second edition that she was able to use her own name. In 1911 she published ""Women and Labour"" after having partly reconstructed it, as this was one of the manuscripts that had been destroyed. The book was immensely influential to the women's emancipation movement in England and The United States and is often referred to as the ""bible"" of the Women's Movement. One of the essays from that book, ""Woman and War"" was published as a separate booklet in 1914. Olive Schreiner died in 1920. - Summary by Noel Badrian"

More from Olive Schreiner

Olive Schreiner
Olive Schreiner
Anna Laetitia Barbauld, Dora Sigerson Shorter, Mary Butts, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Katherine Davis Chapman Tillman, Emily Bronte, Holloway Horn, Mary Austin, Mrs Ernest Leverson, Frances E Huntley, Georgia F Stewart, Ella Hepworth Dixon writing as Margaret Wynham, Violet Quirk, Lucy Maud Montgomery, Louisa Baldwin, Fanny Fern, the writing pseudonym for Sarah Payton Parton, Victoria Earle Matthews, Mary Russell Mitford, Lady Augusta Gregory, Lucretia Peabody Hale, Catherine Anne Dawson Scott, Gertrude Minnie Robins, Fanny Kemble Johnson, Katharine Butler, Elsie Norris, Maude K Griffin, Annie McCary, Winifred Holtby, Mary Anne Hoare, Laurence Alma-Tadema, Olive Schreiner, Mary Chavelita Dunne Bright writing as George Egerton, Ruth D Todd, Elia W. Peattie, Catherine Wells, Mary Anne Atherstone writing as M A Bird, Charlotte Brontë, Wilhelmina FitzClarence, The Countess of Munster & Gertrude Atherton
Olive Schreiner
Guy de Maupassant, Edgar Allan Poe, Anton Chekhov, O. Henry, Virginia Woolf, Wilkie Collins, Alexander Pushkin, Mary Shelley, Olive Schreiner, Mary Butts, Washington Irving, Voltaire, Saki, Fyodor Dostovesky, H. P. Lovecraft, Lafcadio Hearn, Hume Nisbet, Henry James, Arthur Conan Doyle & H. G. Wells