ABOUT THIS BOOK: In 1899, a South African showman called Frank Fillis chartered a liner and filled it with two hundred Africans, assorted whites, countless wild animals and a man who claimed to be the son of the Matabele King, Lobengula. Then he brought all these ingredients together at Earl's Court in London, in a show called Savage South Africa, which combined thrilling re-enactments of the Matabele Wars of the 189os and a 'Kaffir Kraal', where the British public could wander among Africans in their natural setting.
At first all went well. But then the star of the show, Prince Lobengula, caused a scandal by trying to marry a pretty, respectable, white girl, Kitty Jewell — the daughter of a Cornish mining engineer, whom he had met in South Africa. `There is something inexpressibly disgusting in the idea of the mating of a white girl and a dusky savage,' declared the Evening News. Its stable-mate, the Daily Mail, raised an outcry against the behaviour of women visitors to the show who were 'weakening the Empire' by being over familiar with the semi-naked Africans. It showed, said Vanity Fair, that the New Woman could not tell a savage from a savant.
This is the story of the doomed love affair between Kitty Jewell and Peter Lobengula. It is at once a heart-breaking love story, a historical mystery, and a window into popular racism, popular journalism, and feminism in the 189os.
Condition: Good. Packed in a RIGID mailer with padding. Click on Photo to see actual item. Ships same or next day (weekdays and Saturdays)! Ships from California. Pages: not written on, clean, moderate tanning, odor free. Cover: clean, bright, edges - rubbing to edges and corner tips.