Women encounter the empire

Tours of the colonies were often tales of the superiority of technology (and Europeans) over the colonial lands.

Some wrote about their (potential) encounters as dangerous. Marga von Etzdorf told a newspaper that: 'The Arabs in this region insist on their freedom and independence. What in the atlas is labelled as department, state or colony in Africa does not interest them, and everything that dares enter their territory falls under their law.'

However, more reflective encounters with both natives and other Europeans also emerged. The Portuguese colonial photographer Elmano Cunha e Costa captured a glimpse of how 'natives' viewed Europeans in jeeps in an exhibition of indigenous art in Loanda, Anglola in 1938.  

On April Fool's Day, 1930, two South African women of British origin, Margaret Belcher and Ellen Budgell, embarked on a journey that seemed something of a parody. 

Acquiring a second-hand Morris that they dubbed "Bohunkus," they drove from Cape Town to the Morris factory in Cowley, England. Belcher's 1932 account, entitled Cape to Cowley via Cairo in a Light Car, is largely a comic tale of breakdowns, solved in part with the assistance of natives they encountered on the way.

While Belcher proudly saw the two women as braver – or crazier – than the native "boys" who did not want to spend the night in the bush, the account also raised questions about how superior imperial skills and technology actually were in the colonies.

How to cite this page

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Alexander Badenoch, 'Women encounter the empire', Inventing Europe, http://www.inventingeurope.eu/story/women-encounter-the-empire

Sources

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  1. Clarsen, Georgine. "Machines as the Measure of Women: Colonial Irony in a Cape to Cairo Automobile Journey, 1930." The Journal of Transport History 29, no. 1 (2008): 44–63.
  2. (quote from:) Kölner Stadtanzeiger, 26 January 1931, article in album of newspaper clippings in the Marga von Etzdorf archive in the Deutsches Museum (NL 075)

About this tour

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Girls and their toys: European women conquer the world in cars and planes

In the early 1900s, motorized adventurers became worldwide celebrities. Many of them were women. Increasingly independent women took bicycles, then cars and airplanes to explore remote parts of the world. While blazing these new trails, they also highlighted how Europeans viewed themselves in relation to the rest of the world.


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