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Sarah Gertrude Millin (1889–1968)

Autor von Cecil Rhodes

30+ Werke 143 Mitglieder 2 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Bildnachweis: Sarah Gertrude Millin before 1931

Werke von Sarah Gertrude Millin

Cecil Rhodes (1933) 28 Exemplare
God's Stepchildren (1986) 12 Exemplare
The South Africans 9 Exemplare
South Africa (1941) 7 Exemplare
The coming of the Lord (1928) 7 Exemplare
The Burning Man (1952) 6 Exemplare
The people of South Africa (1953) 6 Exemplare
King of the Bastards (1950) 6 Exemplare
The Wizard Bird (1962) 5 Exemplare
General Smuts 5 Exemplare
The night is long (1941) 5 Exemplare
Mary Glenn (1999) 4 Exemplare
What Hath a Man? 4 Exemplare
White Africans are Also People (1967) 3 Exemplare
Middle Class (1928) 3 Exemplare
The Fiddler (1937) 3 Exemplare
The Jordans (1928) 3 Exemplare
Adam's Rest 2 Exemplare
The Sons Of Mrs Aab (1931) 2 Exemplare
The dark river (2013) 2 Exemplare
General Smuts: Volume 1 (v. 1) (1936) 2 Exemplare
World blackout 1 Exemplar
Men on a voyage 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

A Golden Treasure of Jewish Literature (1937) — Mitwirkender — 75 Exemplare
Africa: A Foreign Affairs Reader (1964) — Mitwirkender — 7 Exemplare

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Wissenswertes

Andere Namen
Liebson, Sarah Gertrude (birth name)
Geburtstag
1889-03-19
Todestag
1968-07-06
Geschlecht
female
Nationalität
South Africa
Geburtsort
Zagar, Lithuania

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

I didn't realise it until I started reading it, but this goes together with Millin's earlier novel about Coenraad Buys, King of the Bastards (1949), which overlaps with it in time. I'll have to look for that: apparently she got Jan Smuts to write the foreword, which gives an indication of where she must have stood in mid-century South Africa.

Johannes van der Kemp (1747-1811) was one of the many "stranger than fiction" figures who pop up in Southern African history. An Enlightenment scholar at Leiden who became a libertine army officer, got chucked out of the service for marrying outside his own social class, qualified as a doctor in Scotland, and then, late in life, experienced a religious conversion and was one of the first group of Evangelical missionaries sent out to the Cape by the London Missionary Society, where he became a thorn in the side of the Dutch and (later) the British colonial authorities, as well as antagonising the Boers. Most improbably of all, he found common ground with the rebellious and anarchistic patriarch Coenraad Buys when the two met at the court of the Xhosa king Gaika (modern spelling Ngqika: Buys had recently become his stepfather).

In turning van der Kemp's life into an historical novel, Millin is clearly fascinated by the strong passions that drove the twists and turns of his improbable career, with its odd mixture of Enlightenment humanism, evangelical Christianity, and powerful sexual impulses. And she enjoys his provocation of the racist sensibilities of the Boers, and has fun imagining the three strong female characters she brings into his life: Susanna, the married woman who becomes the mother of his daughter; Helena, his working-class first wife; and Sally, the mixed-race teenager he marries in his old age. But I don't think it entirely succeeds: Millin is just a bit too polite, perhaps, or hasn't quite made her mind up what it is that is really driving van der Kemp. Probably she finds van der Kemp's absolute opposition to racism and slavery more important than the sincerity or hypocrisy of his religious beliefs, and she doesn't want to obscure that by offending either her religious readers or the atheist ones.

An interesting period piece, anyway.
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
thorold | Jul 19, 2020 |
South Africa
 
Gekennzeichnet
oirm42 | May 25, 2018 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
30
Auch von
2
Mitglieder
143
Beliebtheit
#144,062
Bewertung
3.2
Rezensionen
2
ISBNs
9

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