1st Edition

British Paternalism and Africa, 1920–1940

By Penelope Hetherington Copyright 1978

    British Paternalism and Africa (1978) is a study of the beliefs and assumptions of members of the British intelligentsia who concerned themselves with British–African politics in the period between the wars. The journals and books published in Britain during this period were used as source material to discover the attitudes of politicians, missionaries, administrators and others concerning ‘African’ issues. In the two decades before the Second World War the debate about the future of the African colonies still seemed to be the preserve of Europeans, anxious to influence British politics according to their own particular brand of paternalism. It is argued that some writers still used arguments about Britain’s ‘civilizing’ mission, while others emphasised the need for a period of reconstruction of African society, to be carried out before independence could be granted. Only the Marxist-Leninist writers rejected doctrines which implied the necessity for continued European presence in Africa.

    1. The Writers  2. The Journals  3. The Meaning of Colonial Trusteeship  4. The Problems of Social Change  5. Theories about Race  6. Development and Research  7. Education  8. Administration

    Biography

    Penelope Hetherington