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Countries of the Mind - The Fiction of J. M. Coetzee (Hardcover)
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Countries of the Mind - The Fiction of J. M. Coetzee (Hardcover)
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Since the publication of his first novel in 1974, J. M. Coetzee has
attained a reputation as one of the world's most respected
novelists. The demand for his works is related to the world's
interest in the politics, literature, culture, and society of South
Africa. However, Coetzee's fictions remain significant, according
to Penner, apart from their South African context, because of their
artistry and because they transform urgent societal concerns into
more enduring questions regarding colonialism and the relationships
of mastery and servitude between cultures and individuals. Penner
provides an in-depth, critical reading of Coetzee's five novels,
drawing upon primary and critical texts on Western and South
African literature and society. He argues that Coetzee's writings
subvert traditional novel forms and thus become self-reflexive
commentaries on the nature of fiction and fiction writing. Despite
the diversity of their forms, Coetzee's novels all deal with the
Cartesian division between the self and others that is at the base
of all colonial and master/slave relationships. Many of Coetzee's
protagonists who struggle to escape this Cartesian dichotomy and
the colonizing mentality it fosters also hold a privileged status
within their societies. As a result, they face a moral dilemma:
even if they are personally innocent of any acts of oppression,
they still share responsibility as members of the colonizing group.
If Coetzee does not provide solutions or a direct call to action to
resolve South Africa's enormous problems, Penner suggests, it is
because Coetzee is striking at a more fundamental problem: the
psychological, philosophical, and linguistic foundations of the
colonial dilemma. Penner also deals with the question of Coetzee's
identity as a South African writer, arguing that his tradition is
the broader Western literary tradition of which South Africa is a
part. This book should be read by anyone interested in Coetzee's
fiction, modern fiction, and Third World and South African
literature.
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