Abstract
AbstractThis article examines the politics of colonial voluntary work as an aspect of settler society and in relation to broader networks of imperial activism and reform. The East Africa Women's League, a predominant white women's organization in colonial Kenya, participated in settler politics during debates in 1930 concerning a Closer Union of British territories in East Africa. This involvement established connections between the voluntary welfare activities of settler women in Kenya and contemporary transimperial activist networks. Drawing on the private archives of the League, this article argues that the public lives of white women in colonial Kenya were entwined in the tensions of welfare in the twentieth-century British imperial project.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
10 articles.
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1. Bibliography;Primitive Normativity;2023-12-08
2. Notes;Primitive Normativity;2023-12-08
3. Conclusion;Primitive Normativity;2023-12-08
4. Eating the Other;Primitive Normativity;2023-12-08
5. Queering Settler Romance;Primitive Normativity;2023-12-08