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This land is us : aspects of the Plaasroman and hospitality in five post-apartheid Karoo novels.Thomas, Stuart. January 2011 (has links)
This dissertation investigates five texts: Damon Galgut‟s The Imposter (2008), Anne
Landsman‟s The Devil’s Chimney (1998), Eben Venter‟s My Beautiful Death (1998) and
Trencherman (2008) and Zoë Wicomb‟s David’s Story (2000).
In addition to being written in the post-apartheid era, these five texts are all set wholly or
partially in the Karoo, a semi-desert landscape unique to South Africa. The Karoo is,
however, more than just a common setting onto which their individual stories have been
transposed. It is part of the literary imagination of each text. Within these texts are a number
of fluid interactions between the consciousnesses and the landscapes they portray. Of course,
to attempt to examine these interactions as occurring purely between landscape and
consciousness would be foolhardy. As such, this project investigates these links by
comparing the texts under investigation to the historical literary form of the plaasroman and
by scrutinising them through the theoretical concept of hospitality, as outlined by Jacques
Derrida.
According to J.M. Coetzee term „plaasroman‟ refers to the type of early twentiethcentury
Afrikaans novel which “concerned itself almost exclusively with the farm and
platteland (rural society) and with the Afrikaner‟s painful transition from farmer to
townsman” (1988: 63). This project investigates all five texts in relation to a number of the
concerns common to the plaasroman, including the idea of the farm as a patriarchal idyll, its
valorisation of near-mythical ancestral values and the pushing of black labour to the
peripheries of narrative consciousness. These concerns, along with the fact that the
plaasroman marks out the farm as a fenced off area surrounded by threatening forces, means
that it is an ideal form to include in an investigation involving hospitality
Derrida outlines hospitality, at its most basic level as “the right of a stranger not to be
treated with hostility when he arrives on someone else‟s territory” (Derrida 2007: 246). This
relationship, however, goes further than a simple binary. Both host and guest give and receive
hospitality. From Derrida‟s meditations on the subject come two forms of hospitality:
Conditional and unconditional. The primary distinction between these two kinds of
hospitality is a distinction “between a form of subjectivity constituted through a hostile
process of inclusion and exclusion and one that comes into being in the self‟s pre-reflective
and traumatic exposure, without inhibition, to otherness” (Marais 2009: 275). Unconditional
hospitality is the latter and morally preferable.
In linking the two concepts, this dissertation illustrates the degrees to which each text,
through subverting, or conforming to the conventions of the plaasroman, achieves instances
of unconditional hospitality. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2011.
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Nadine Gordimer and Doris Lessing : white colonial attitudes in South Africa and Southern Rhodesia, 1930-1965.Wettenhall, Irene. January 1977 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (B.A.Hons.1978) - Dept. of History, University of Adelaide.
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Walls and remembrance / Talking homeM-Afrika, Andile Ernest January 2014 (has links)
This is a story of a quest that begins on a wall of history at a cemetery where Steve Biko was buried. The main character is the writer, who is partly the author, partly a fictionalised everyman. He is on a journey of self-discovery, while at the same time questioning contemporary South Africa.
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From Dolly Gray to Sarie Marais : the Boer War in popular memoryRice, Michael 15 July 2014 (has links)
D.Litt. et Phil. (English) / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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PenumbraMahlangu, Songeziwe January 2012 (has links)
After failing his Post Graduate Diploma in Accounting Mangaliso Zolo takes an office job at a large insurance company in Cape Town. Anonymous and overlooked in a vast bureaucracy but with a pay check promising happiness and security, he slides into a series of personal crises that test his grip on what he believes in. When at his lowest ebb he leaves his job, grabs his bible and hits the streets his world closes in on him and he is eventually confined to a psychiatric hospital. Penumbra is a novel that explores the liminal area between faith and avarice, sanity and madness, modernity and tradition, friendship and enmity. It is set in contemporary South Africa, a society defined by alienation and excess.
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Third crime unluckyCartwright, Robert Oliver January 2012 (has links)
This is a contemporary mystery novel set in the Eastern Cape. A town’s airstrip, situated between the golf club and the military base, acts as host to the local flying club and an active skydiving school. An amateur investigator uses unorthodox methods and the help of friends to find the cause of aeroplane fires and sabotage. His investigations lead him via geological research and insurance reports into contact with members of the aviation, property development and military fields.
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Before before & after afterMusavengana, Shelter K January 2015 (has links)
The stories in this collection explore the fantastical, the power of memory, and the human capacity to love. Moving between the surreal, the absurd, the allegorical, and the metafictional, they elaborate on life's ordinary madness and the mysteries of the spirit. By challenging the either/or boundaries of the binary of realism and fantasy, the stories provoke the reader to engage actively with the text. Influenced by experimental US author Stacey Levine, the mid‐century British novelist Barbara Comyns, and the adventurous Chinese writer Can Xue, in most cases, they create a playful, experimental world that exists at a slight angle to the world as we know it.
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Apartheid legacies and identity politics in Kopano Matlwa's Coconut, Zoë Wicomb's Playing in the light and Jacques Pauw's Little ice cream boyScott, Simone January 2012 (has links)
An analysis of the preoccupation writers of South African fiction display after the process started by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission is vital in post-apartheid South African writing. It becomes clear that a fascination with the past is not bound to any one specific racial or gender group within post-apartheid South Africa. Authors can therefore be said to continue the excavation work that the TRC started many years ago. The severe impact that the rigid classification of human beings into different groups based on race had, and continues to have, becomes evident in contemporary South African writing. The fact that white privilege always comes at a cost for those wanting to attain or maintain it cannot be overlooked and whiteness as a construct is examined.
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Writing the Diaspora : a bibliography and critical commentary on post-Shoah English-language fiction in Australia, South Africa, and CanadaHart, Alexander 05 1900 (has links)
In the aftermath of the Shoah (Holocaust)—the mass murder of 6,000,000
Jews—Jean-Paul Sartre wrote Reflexions sur la Question Juive (1946), in which he
concluded that the fate of the Jews, the fate of the individual non-Jew, and the fate of the entire world are inextricably and reciprocally intertwined. Building on Sartre's perception, Portrait of a Jew (1962) and The Liberation of the Jew (1966) describe what the author, Albert Memmi, terms "the universal Jewish fate": that of being the paradigmatic "colonized" Other—insofar as the Jews are a particularly oppressed minority, that is, their
marginalization epitomizes the fate of all humanity. Further, Memmi argues both that "to be a Jewish writer is ... to express the Jewish fate" and that a "true Jewish literature" is necessarily one which revolts against the imposition and acceptance of this fate. Sartre's
and Memmi's insights posit that Jewish consciousness acts upon both national and world consciousness. Memmi suggests that one means of expressing the Jewish consciousness is through literature. In their imaginative interpretations of the post-Shoah interconnections between the Jew, the nation, and the world, modern Jewish fiction writers of the Diaspora (dispersion)
—at least those whose work foregrounds tropes of Jewish sensibility, incorporating Jewish characters and themes—often delineate a world which, in the aftermath of Auschwitz, is socially and existentially even more precarious than it was before the war. This study examines post-Shoah Jewish consciousness and its relation to national/world consciousness,as represented in the English-language Jewish fiction of Australia, South Africa, and Canada, Commonwealth countries whose diverse Jewish literatures have been overshadowed by the predominant English-language Jewish literary culture of the U.S.A. The structure of this study is bipartite. Part B is an indexed Bibliography enumerating primary works by Jewish prose fiction writers of Australia, Canada, and South Africa. Part A is a critical commentary on Part B. The Introduction (Chapter 1) outlines the
theoretical bases for the study. The three following chapters scrutinize Jewish Australian (Chapter 2), Jewish South African (Chapter 3), and Jewish Canadian (Chapter 4) fiction. Among the writers considered are Australians B.N. Jubal, Judah Waten, David Martin, Morris Lurie, Serge Liberman, and Lily Brett; South Africans Nadine Gordimer, Dan Jacobson, Jillian Becker, Antony Sher, and Rose Zwi; and Canadians Henry Kreisel, A.M. Klein, Adele Wiseman, Mordecai Richler, and Robert Majzels. Each of these three chapters follows a similar format: a description of the origin, history, and demography of the Jewish community; an outline of the important pre-World War II Jewish fiction writers and their work; an examination of representative post-Shoah works; and concluding remarks about
the ways in which the works under consideration here contest and revise both the canons of nation and national literature and the very concepts of nation, canon, and canon-making. An Epilogue (Chapter 5) contextualizes the thematic patterns common to the Jewish fiction of the three countries and suggests ways in which this fiction can be located within the larger framework of Jewish Literature.
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Good-Gooder-Goodest / Isikhumba SikaxamMajola, Fundile Lawrence January 2014 (has links)
My stories are set in the townships, and move with the vigorous rhythms and jagged structures of township life. Some of them are written in English and others in isiXhosa. Some of the dialogue is township slang, a mixture of languages; and pure isiXhosa. The stories follow no particular pattern and are arranged according to any form of chronology, and different voices, at times as a man/boy and in others as a girl. The characters are not related each story perfectly stands for itself. Some of the stories hark back to the days of apartheid and are seen through the eyes of a child confused by the humiliations of his elders. / Amabali am asekelwe ezilokishini yaye ahambelana neemeko ezimaxongo zokuphila zasezilokishini apho yaye amanye asukela kwixesha lengcinezelo yesizwe esimnyama. Imiba echatshazelwa kula mabali iquka intlupheko, intiyo kwakunye nokuphilisana koluntu ezilokishini, phantsi kwezo meko. Amabali la ndizame ukuwenza alandele indlela yokubalisa yhenkwenkwana enguSkhumba, ethi ibone iqwalasele iimeko zokuphila zabantu bohlanga lwayo. Ingqokelela esisiqendu sokuqala yona ibhalwe ze yangeniswa ngesiNgesi. / This thesis is presented in two parts: English and isiXhosa.
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