Description
Payment & Security
Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.
We'll send updates on new releases, special events, great deals, freebies, and more. No more than once per month. We don't share your information with anyone.
2012 Edition Award Honorable Mention, Society for the Study of American Women Writers
Writing Travel Series
Edited by Jeanne Moskal
Information and Pricing
978-1-60235-141-7 (paperback, $32); 978-1-60235-142-4 (hardcover, $65); 978-1-60235-143-1 (PDF; $19.99), © 2011 by Parlor Press. 381 pages, with illustrations, annotations, notes, bibliography, and index.
Bookstores: Order by fax, mail, or phone. See our "Sales and Ordering Page" for details.
Nellie Arnott's Writing on Angola, 1905-1913 recovers and interprets the public texts of a teacher serving at a mission station sponsored by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions in Portuguese West Africa. Along with a collection of her magazine narratives, mission reports, and correspondence, Nellie Arnott's Writing on Angola offers a critical analysis of Arnott's writing about her experiences in Africa, including interactions with local Umbundu Christians, and about her journey home to the U.S., when she spent time promoting the mission movement before marrying and settling in California.
Nellie Arnott's Writings on Angola sets Arnott's writing within the context of its historical moment, especially the particular situation of American Protestant women missionaries working in a Portuguese colony. This book responds to recent calls for scholarship exploring specific cases of cross-cultural exchange in colonial settings, with a recognition that no single pattern of relationships would hold in all such sites. Robbins and Pullen also position Arnott's diverse texts within the tradition of feminist scholarship drawing on multifaceted archives to recover women's under-studied publications from previous eras.
Part I presents three approaches to interpreting Arnott's oeuvre: biographical (Chapter 1), historical (Chapter 2), and rhetorical (Chapter 3). Chapters 4, 5, and 6 (Part II) provide an annotated edition of Arnott's public texts, organized into three stages of authorial development, ranging from her initial journey to Africa, to her gradual professionalization as a mission teacher, to her travels home and fundraising while on furlough.
Sarah Robbins and Ann Ellis Pullen used Nellie Arnott’s public writings to show how Arnott developed as a writer…. Robbins and Pullen do not hesitate to characterize Arnott’s work as part of a colonial enterprise. Through a careful analysis of her writings, however, they argue that Arnott’s experiences in Angola enabled her to develop her authorial voice, contribute to building an important female literacy network in the United States, and shape the imagination of new constituencies of mission supporters for Africa. (197-98). —Barbara Reeves-Ellington, writing for Social Sciences and Missions 24 (2011)
Arnott's missionary narratives, which take readers on a fascinating odyssey from the American South to Portuguese West Africa to the golden state of California, demonstrate the complex national and transnational contexts that shaped perceptions about race, class, gender, and religion in the early twentieth century. Robbins's and Pullen's scrupulous and exhaustive archival research on Arnott's life and public and private writing distinguishes their book from other recovered travel literature. They demonstrate the significance of feminist discursive analysis as a methodology for understanding culture. —Barbara McCaskill, University of Georgia
In my graduate class, which focuses on American women’s rhetoric and religion, I use Nellie Arnott’s Writings on Angola, as part our examination of the women’s missionary movement and its empowering impact on women. I especially appreciate how Robbins and Pullen's book contributes to my class's discussions of women’s rhetorical practices, the archival recovery of women rhetors, and the value of interdisciplinary inquiries. —Lisa Shaver, Baylor University
It was with much anticipation that I began reading Nellie Arnott's Writing on Angola, 1905-1913: Missionary Narratives Linking Africa and America. Most of Ms. Arnott's time in Angola was spent on the then ABCFM mission station of Kamundongo in the highlands of the then Portuguese colony. Here she learned to function, as a teacher and evangelist, in Umbundu, the language of one of the major groups in Angola and, indeed, one of my “first” languages. My eagerness was born of the fact that, of my seventeen years in Angola, I spent the first five in Kamundongo (decades after Ms. Arnott’s time), having been born nearby in Chissamba where the mission hospital had a doctor. A major pleasure, then, was the promise of reading about places and people that I would recognize, some because they lived on into my time, many others because of the oral histories recounted by my parents and their colleagues as well as by the parents and elders of my Umbundu friends. My expectations were more than met. For several days I read well into the night, scribbling notes I would develop in emails to the authors, and pausing to conjure up an event, face or place once so familiar to me. For the events and situations recounted in Ms. Arnott’s letters, including her relationships with other missionaries, the Umbundu people and Portuguese authorities, the authors identify patterns and contexts that have enhanced my understanding of the first seventeen years of my life. An instructive and personally rewarding read! —Frank Collins, Ph.D., Victoria College, University of Toronto, Canada
Sarah Robbins is the Lorraine Sherley Professor of Literature at Texas Christian University and the author of Managing Literacy, Mothering America (Pittsburgh Press, 2006), which won a Choice award from the American Library Association. She is also the author of The Cambridge Introduction to Harriet Beecher Stowe (Cambridge, 2007).
Ann Ellis Pullen is Professor of History, Emerita, at Kennesaw State University, where she chaired the Department of History and Philosophy and the Women's Studies Program. She has authored articles on the early twentieth-century interracial movement in the U.S. South in a variety of publications.
Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.
Most books may be returned by retailers for full credit within 180 days of the date of the original invoice (see below for return policies for open access Titles" for the exceptions"). Books must be in resalable condition for full credit. Credit cannot be given for books that cannot be resold. Permission is unnecessary with invoice and prepaid return.
Return Address: Parlor Press, 3015 Brackenberry Drive, Anderson, SC 29621 (UPS, FedEx, or US Mail)
Please use our website contact form, call 765.409.2649, or email sales@parlorpress.com with questions.
Parlor Press publishes a large number of titles that are available online for free and also in low-cost print versions. So that we can continue to offer these titles in free online editions, we require that orders for printed copies be paid for at the time of purchase and may not be returned (unless damaged in transit). Bookstores should be aware that many instructors don't require printed versions of these titles or, even when they do, students use the free online versions. So adjust order quantities carefully! If you have questions about whether a specific title is returnable, please use our website contact form, call 765.409.2649, or email sales@parlorpress.com
If physical books, journals, magazines, comics, CDs, or DVDs you purchase from our website are damaged when you receive them, you can return them for replacement or a refund for up to thirty (30) days. Please use the site's contact form to let us know if there are any other issues of if you're not sure an item can be returned. If 30 days have gone by since your purchase, unfortunately we can’t offer you a refund or exchange.
Other physical items that you might purchase and that aren't consumable content (like a book or journal) may be returned for up to thirty (30) days for credit or a refund. To be eligible for a return, your item must be unused and in the same condition that you received it. It must also be in the original packaging.
We do not offer returns on physical books that are undamaged, ebook purchases (in PDF or EPUB format), gift cards, or other downloadable products.
To complete your return, we require a receipt or proof of purchase.
Please do not send your purchase back to the manufacturer.
Refunds (if applicable)
Once your return is received and inspected, we will send you an email to notify you that we have received your returned item. We will also notify you of the approval or rejection of your refund. If approved, then your refund will be processed, and a credit will automatically be applied to your credit card or original method of payment, within ten days.
Late or missing refunds (if applicable)
If you haven’t received an expected refund, first check your bank or card account again. It may take some time before your refund is officially posted. If you’ve done all of this and you still have not received your refund, please contact us via our site contact form.
Sale items (if applicable)
Only regular priced items may be refunded. Unfortunately sale items cannot be refunded.
Exchanges (if applicable)
We only replace items if they are defective or damaged. If you need to exchange it for the same item, use our site contact form and then send your the items to Parlor Press LLC, 3015 Brackenberry Drive, Anderson SC 29621, United States.
Gifts
If the item was marked as a gift when purchased and shipped directly to you, you’ll receive a gift credit for the value of your return. Once the returned item is received, a gift card code will be emailed to you.
If the item wasn’t marked as a gift when purchased, or the gift giver had the order shipped to themselves to give to you later, the refund will go to the gift giver, who will find out about your return.
Shipping
To return your product, you should mail it to Parlor Press LLC, 3015 Brackenberry Drive, Anderson SC 29621, United States
You will be responsible for paying for your own shipping costs for returning your item. Shipping costs are nonrefundable.
If you are shipping an item over $75, you should consider using a trackable shipping service or purchasing shipping insurance. We can't guarantee that we will receive your returned item.
We deliver worldwide.
We can ship from our distributors around the world.
Fast shipping
Most orders are processed within 24 hours.
Question about a book, series, author, or anything else?
Use our contact form to ask away.
Secure payments
All purchases are secure and private.