Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Rape, Race, and Respectability in a South African Port City
In late 19th century and early 20th century South Africa, public panics about black men who raped white women (the “black peril”) provided a potent framework for mobilizing racial nationalism. The experiences of women who attempted to prosecute sexual assaults, however, were more complicated than the black peril panics might suggest. In the port city of East London, the English-speaking elite who dominated the judicial system judged women according to norms of respectability derived from middle-class British culture. Both black women and poorer white women, particularly German and Afrikaans speakers, found it difficult to measure up to these standards and, as a result, were rarely believed when they brought forward complaints of rape. This skepticism of rape complaints persisted even when white women accused black men of rape, since the typical victim in such cases was a white woman whose social life already transgressed the racial boundaries required by respectability.
Rape, Race, and Respectability in a South African Port City
In late 19th century and early 20th century South Africa, public panics about black men who raped white women (the “black peril”) provided a potent framework for mobilizing racial nationalism. The experiences of women who attempted to prosecute sexual assaults, however, were more complicated than the black peril panics might suggest. In the port city of East London, the English-speaking elite who dominated the judicial system judged women according to norms of respectability derived from middle-class British culture. Both black women and poorer white women, particularly German and Afrikaans speakers, found it difficult to measure up to these standards and, as a result, were rarely believed when they brought forward complaints of rape. This skepticism of rape complaints persisted even when white women accused black men of rape, since the typical victim in such cases was a white woman whose social life already transgressed the racial boundaries required by respectability.
Rape, Race, and Respectability in a South African Port City
Thornberry, Elizabeth (Autor:in)
2016
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Englisch
Rape, Race, and Respectability in a South African Port City: East London, 1870-1927
Online Contents | 2016
|Co-Opting Respectability: African American Women and Economic Redress in New York City, 1860-1910
Online Contents | 2015
|Online Contents | 2017
|Race, Class, and Inequality in the South African City
Wiley | 2011
|City of Thieves: Moldavanka, Criminality, and Respectability in Prerevolutionary Odessa
Online Contents | 2001
|