The Black Peril and Miscegenation: The Regulation of Inter-racial Sexual Relations in Southern Rhodesia, 1890-1933Posted in Africa, Canada, Dissertations, History, Law on 2012-05-26 15:33Z by Steven |
McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
September 1991
140 Pages
Katherine Gombay
A Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of M.A.
For over forty years, at the turn of this century, the white settlers of Southern Rhodesia devoted considerable energy to the discussion and the regulation of inter-racial sexual relations. The settlers’ worries about maintaining their position in power were expressed, in part, in the periodic outbreaks of ‘black peril’ hysteria, a term which well-captures white fears about the threat that African men were thought to represent to white women. Although voluntary sexual encounters between white women and black men were prohibited from 1903 onwards, no such prohibition existed for white men in their relations with black women. The white women made several attempts to have legislation passed prohibiting such liasons, and failed largely because in doing so they were perceived to be challenging the authority of the white men. The regulation of interracial sexual intercourse thus served to reinforce the white male domination of Rhodesian society.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Chapter 1—Setting the Scene: The White Settlement of Southern Rhodesia, 1890-1903.
- Chapter 2—1903-1916: The Black Peril and the Immorality Acts.
- Chapter 3—The Miscegenation Debates, 1916 -1930.
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
Read the entire thesis here.