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The outsider figure in Lewis Nkosi's Mating birds and Underground People.Raj, Lea Ann. January 2005 (has links)
This thesis will examine the trope of the outsider figure in Lewis Nkosi's two
novels, Mating Birds (1986) and Underground People (2002). Since both novels
are set in South Africa and are informed by the political context of this country at
particular junctures, the thesis will focus on the. effects of apartheid on the two
black protagonists - central characters yet 'outsider figures' - in these novels.
This thesis will argue that Lewis Nkosi's own position as an 'outsider figure' in
South African letters plays an important function in his writing. In support of this
point, I will therefore also refer to his non fictional books, Home and Exile and
Other Selections (1965) and Tasks and Masks: themes and styles of African
Literature (1981). These books are particularly important because they document
Nkosi's comments on South African literature and his position as the 'outsider'
acerbic critic. Nkosi can be seen as an outsider figure being a young, black
South African living in an apartheid South Africa, and also, later, as a writer in
exile.
I have chosen Mating Birds and Underground People to illustrate my argument
because they are not simply 'protest' novels, (in the sense Nkosi argued in Home
and Exile and Tasks and Masks that so much black South African literature of a
certain era was), but rather they examine the complex effects of exclusion, with
regard to race and politics, on the individual. As the 'outsider' figure found full
expression in French existentialist writing, I will also look at constructions of the
outsider figure from an existentialist perspective. In his preface to the 2002
edition of Mating Birds, Nkosi reveals that the novel was to a large extent
influenced by Albert Camus' The Outsider (1942). In writing The Outsider,
Camus explores questions raised by the philosophy of existentialism. Similarly,
Nkosi looks at black existence in a hostile apartheid environment, the absurdity
of Sibiya's predicament and how he came to be there. He also explores the
harshness of the physical environment which is a literal representation of Sibiya's
anguish. Postcolonial analysis of 'othering', a logical extension of existentialism's
'outsider' figure will be used to support my argument.
Mating Birds (1986), among other accolades, won the prestigious Macmillan
International Pen Prize. Set between the 1950's and 1960's, it explores the
divisions and prejudices that were experienced between white and black in a
country steeped in racism and division. It deals primarily with the obsession an
educated, young, black man, Ndi Sibiya, has for a white woman, Veronica Slater.
Their illicit sexual relationship results in Sibiya being tried and convicted, by a
white court, for rape. Underground People (2002), Nkosi's second novel, set in
the late 1980's and early 1990's, takes the reader into the world of politics and
underground resistance during the apartheid regime in South Africa. It narrates
the adventures of Cornelius Molapo, an awkward member of the "National
Liberation Movement", the fictional name of the African National Congress.
Chapter One of this mini-dissertation will focus on a definition and exploration of
the outsider figure in selected literary and theoretical works. Chapter Two will
focus on the life and works of Lewis Nkosi in an effort to link the trope of the
outsider figure to Nkosi's own life experience. His books, Tasks and Masks and
Home and Exile, both collections of essays, help the reader to develop a picture
of Nkosi, not only as a writer but also as a literary critic whose writing developed
while in exile.
Chapter Three and Four will provide a literary analysis of Mating Birds and
Underground People, respectively. The analysis will deal with the outsider figure
as a prominent feature of both these novels. Post-colonial analyses such as
forwarded by Edward Said, Gayatri Spivak and Homi Bhabha will be used to
advance the thesis.
The conclusion (Chapter Five) will refer briefly to Nkosi's current writing projects
and situate them in the post-apartheid South African context. An assessment of
the on-going potential for the 'outsider' figure in Nkosi's contemporary work will
be made. / Thesis (M.A)-University of Durban Westville, 2005.
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The memory of sorrow : a novella.Green, Carole. January 2006 (has links)
Abstract not available. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2006.
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Tlhaloso ya semelo sa moanegwa dingwalong tsa SepediLekganyane, Enniah Matemane 20 October 2005 (has links)
This study attempts to define more clearly the concepts 'flat character' and 'round character' by examining instances of Sepedi literature. Definitions provided by theorists are in most cases vague and may lead to unsatisfactory interpretations. The best examples in this instance are the definitions provided by Forster - they create problems particularly with references to the concept 'round character'. Forster's definition creates the impression that the difference can be based on the manner of characterization. In this investigation, attention is thus paid to characterization, while it is pointed out that these concepts are not to be confused with the concepts 'antagonist', 'protagonist' and 'tritagonist', The latter types of characters are classified as structural elements while the former are thematically important. The Sepedi literary works chosen for the purposes of this stUdy represent the four most important prose genres in Sepedi. Tsebe's Noto-ya-Masogana (1954) is the representative of the category 'love story'; Kekana's Nnete Fela (1989) is a detective story; Rammala's Lukas Motšheletšhele (1963) and Mphahlele's Letsogo la Molao (1984) are tragic narratives, while Phatudi concentrates on and describes elements of pathos in his Tladi wa Dikgati (1971). The characters in Tsebe and Kekana's narratives are flat. Whereas Tsebe's Lesibana is portrayed as a multidimensional character, Ariel in Kekana's detective story is presented as one - dimensional. According to the definitions of Forster, Lesibana could be classified as a round character and Ariel as a flat character. The problem that surfaces in this instance also becomes manifest in the investigation into Rammala, Mphahlele and Phatudi's works. Rammala's Lukas Motsheletshele and Mphahlele's Faro are multidimensional characters as opposed to Phatudi's Tladi who is one¬dimensional, yet all of them are round characters. The distinction that can be drawn between the concepts 'flat character' and 'round character' has to do with humaneness. The reader's identification with the flat character is based on the reader's ability to distinguish between good and evil, while an understanding of and a feeling for fellow human beings determine identification with the round character. The author brings about this identification process by using a variety of literary devices. In this thesis, a great deal of emphasis is placed on the theme of each of the mentioned works and on how this theme determines the character types. The concept of 'identification' is a central issue in this study and has thus been explained in detail. The specific literary devices used by the author to bring about this identification have thus also been carefully investigated and discussed. It was discovered that characterization as such does not determine whether characters are flat or round; instead, this is determined thematically. / Thesis (DLitt (African Languages))--University of Pretoria, 2006. / African Languages / unrestricted
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Depicting the dispossessed in the 1940s: an analysis of Holmer Johanssen's Die Onterfdes and Peter Abraham's Mine BoyGriessel, Karin 22 January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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The reinvention of historical discourse in Zakes Mda's The heart of redness and Mike Nicol's This day and ageSaccaggi, Carolina Francesca 04 December 2008 (has links)
Post-apartheid South African fiction has been the subject of much heated debate. One
specific aspect of this debate has revolved around the role of history in this fiction. This
is linked to general concerns in the country around ways of understanding history,
especially in relation to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s research into the
past. Tracing the lines of debate which emerged out of the discussions around the Truth
and Reconciliation Commission, this research report focuses on the way history is
presented in two novels from the post-apartheid period. These novels are This Day and
Age by Mike Nicol and The Heart of Redness by Zakes Mda. Each of the two novels
concerns a specific incident from the past of South Africa, the Bulhoek massacre and the
Xhosa cattle-killing respectively. Through tracing their intertextual relations with
mainstream accounts of the historical events, the research shows how they interrogate
these accounts. Detailed examination of the portrayal of history in each of the novels
leads to conclusions being drawn about the way in which the novels conceive of such
historical ideas as causality, linearity and responsibility. Finally, the research examines
the role of prophecy in the novels, showing how in both of the texts prophecy can be read
as an alternative explanation for events. The research endeavours ultimately to contribute
to the body of critical thought concerning the analysis of post-apartheid South African
fiction.
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"Troll": dissertation on sexual identity comprising three componentsLotriet, Brett 07 March 2008 (has links)
ABSTRACT
This dissertation explores identity as its central theme. There are three components to the
dissertation. The first is the academic essay which explores identity through the
perspective of queer theory and proposes a three-dimensional conception of an “identity
cloud”. The second component is the creative essay which consists of ten chapters
towards a final novella entitled “troll”. The creative component’s central theme is the
lead protagonist’s struggle in assimilating the identities of “gay” and “addict” after
receiving a liver transplant. The third and final component is an essay detailing the
manner in which the creative and academic created and informed one another.
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Mining, social change and literature: an analysis of South African literature with particular reference to the mining novel, 1870-1920Hofmeyr, Isabel 27 January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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The projectionist: a novelWarring, Susan January 2017 (has links)
Submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, Social Sciences and Education, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts, Creative Writing., July 2012 / XL2018
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Dream castle / Genius lociBenadé, Rudi January 2018 (has links)
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Creative Writing, 2017 / XL2018
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Worlds within words.Williams, Ross. January 2008 (has links)
Abstract not available. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2008.
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