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Ethnic pride and racial prejudice in Victorian Cape Town by Vivian Bickford-Smith and similar books you'll love - Bookscovery

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Ethnic pride and racial prejudice in Victorian Cape Town

Vivian Bickford-Smith

Nineteenth-century Cape Town, the capital of the British Cape Colony, was conventionally regarded as a liberal oasis in an otherwise racist South Africa. Longstanding British influence was thought to mitigate the racism of the Dutch settlers and foster the development of a sophisticated and colour-blind English merchant class. Vivian Bickford-Smith skilfully interweaves political, economic and social analysis to show that the English merchant class, far from being liberal, were generally as racist as Afrikaner farmers. Theirs was, however, a peculiarly English discourse of race, mobilised around a 'Clean Party' obsessed with sanitation and the dangers posed by 'un-English' Capetonians in a period of rapid urbanisation brought about by the discovery of diamonds and gold in the interior. . This original contribution to South African urban history draws on comparative material from...

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