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‘To Control Their Destiny’: The Politics of Home and the Feminisation of Schooling in Colonial Natal, 1885-1910

机译:“控制自己的命运”:1885-1910年殖民地纳塔尔的家庭政治和学校教育的女性化

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This article examines the contradictions that African girls' schooling presented for colonial governance in Natal, through the case study of Inanda Seminary, the region's first and largest all-female school for Africans. While patriarchal colonial law circumscribed the educational options of girls whose fathers opposed their schooling, the head of Natal's nascent educational bureaucracy argued that African girls' education in Western domesticity would be essential in creating different sorts of families with different sorts of needs. In monogamous families, Native Schools Inspector Robert Plant argued, husbands and sons would be taught to ‘want’ enough to impel them to labour for wages - but they would also be sufficiently satisfied by their domestic comforts to avoid political unrest. Thus, even as colonial educational officials clamped down on African boys' curricula - attempting to restrict their schooling to the barest preparation for unskilled wage labour - they allowed missionaries autonomy to educate young women whose fathers did not challenge their school attendance. This was because young women's role in the social reproduction of new sorts of families made their education ultimately appear to be a benefit to colonial governance. As young men pursued wage labour, young women began to comprise the majority of African students, laying the groundwork for the feminisation of schooling in modern southern Africa.View full textDownload full textRelated var addthis_config = { ui_cobrand: "Taylor & Francis Online", services_compact: "citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,delicious,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,more", pubid: "ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b" }; Add to shortlist Link Permalink http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2011.579439
机译:本文通过对本地区第一所也是最大的全非洲女性学校——Inanda Seminary的案例研究,研究了非洲女孩入学对纳塔尔殖民统治的影响。虽然重男轻女的殖民法限制了父亲反对上学的女孩的教育选择,但纳塔尔新生的教育机构的负责人认为,非洲女孩接受西方家庭教育对于建立各种有不同需求的家庭至关重要。土著学校检查员罗伯特·普兰特(Robert Plant)认为,在一夫一妻制家庭中,将教导丈夫和儿子“想要”到足以促使他们为工资而工作的能力-但他们的家庭舒适感也将使他们感到足够满足,以避免政治动荡。因此,即使殖民地教育官员压制了非洲男孩的课程,试图将他们的学业限制在为无技能的有薪劳动的最充分准备上,但他们仍允许传教士自治来教育年轻女性,其父亲没有挑战上学。这是因为年轻妇女在新型家庭的社会再生产中的作用使她们的教育最终似乎对殖民统治有利。随着年轻人追求工资劳动,年轻的非洲妇女开始占大多数的非洲学生,为现代南部非洲的女性化学校化奠定了基础。查看全文下载全文::“ citeulike,netvibes,twitter,technorati,美味,linkedin,facebook,stumbleupon,digg,google,更多”,pubid:“ ra-4dff56cd6bb1830b”};添加到候选列表链接永久链接http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2011.579439

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