Writings
J.M.
Coetzee is a writer who is strongly influenced by his own personal background
of being born and growing up in South Africa. Although a white writer
living in South Africa during apartheid, Coetzee grew to believe in and write
with strong anti-imperialist feelings. His international writings tended
to set him apart from fellow authors in South Africa and his writing was said
to be mostly influenced by the postmodernist writers of Europe and
America. These writers also contained many anti-imperialist sentiments as
a reaction to the Vietnam war. Many of Coetzee's personal experiences and
beliefs can be seen in his books. Coetzee describes his sense of
alienation from fellow Afrikaners in his biography, Boyhood:Scenes from
Provincial Life. Coetzee also writes in his biography and his novels about
the laws that divided himself and others into racial categories that served to
further alienate him.
This
is evidenced in his first novel Dusklands. In this book Coetzee
focuses on two settings: one, the US State Department during the Vietnam
era and two, stories of the exploration and conquest of Southern Africa in the
1760’s by a man named Jacobus Coetzee. These two vastly different
locations work together to bring out the alarm and paranoia of aggressors no
matter what the location and to show the unthinkable ways in which dominant
groups impose their ways upon other cultures.
His
first novel to win the Booker Prize, The Life and Times of Michael K, is
set in Cape Town, a city on the verge of racials wars, and centers around a
gardener who attempts to transport his dying mother to the farm of her youth.
Although she dies during the journey, Michael K continues on to her farm with
her ashes. He lives quite happily in solitude on her old farm until he is
captured and accused of aiding guerillas. The great weight of the
novel relies on the fact that it does not focus in on racial separations but is
more concerned with saving humanity as a whole.
In
his latest novel and the one responsible for garnering him a second Booker
prize, Disgrace, Coetzee deals with a South African professor name David
who goes out to visit his daughter, Lucy's, farm. While he is there a
gang of two men and one boy rapes his daughter. When he later sees the
boy at a party thrown by Lucy's neighbor, Petrus, he demands justice. Petrus
refuses, and promises protection from further attacks to Lucy only if she
marries him. The issues in this novel deal with many of the current
plights of South Africa. Land, crime, rape, lack of police protection and
racial divides are all themes of the novel and problems in modern day South
Africa.
All
of Coetzee's writings are similar in that they often center on a solitary
character. No direct moral is ever given, but rather situations are set up for
the reader to think about. Coetzee’s aim is not to provide solutions, but
to highlight problems and have the reader form their own conclusions.
Awards
-CNA
award 1978, 1980, 1983
-James Tait Black Memorial prize, 1980
-Faber Memorial award, 1980
-Booker prize, 1983, The Life and Times of Michael K
-Fémina prize (France), 1985;
-Jerusalem prize, 1987;
-Sunday Express Book of the Year award,1990;
-Mondello prize (Italy), 1994.
-D.Litt.: University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, 1985
-Life Fellow, University of Cape Town;
-Fellow, Royal Society of Literature, 1988
-Honorary Fellow, Modern Language Association (U.S.A.), 1989.
-Booker Prize, 1999, Disgrace
Works
NOVELS
-Dusklands:Ravan
Press (Johannesburg), 1974, Penguin Books (New York City), 1985.
-From the Heart of the Country, Harper (New York City), 1977
-Waiting for the Barbarians, Penguin Books, 1982.
-The Life and Times of Michael K., Viking (New York City), 1984.
-Foe, Viking, 1987.
-Age of Iron, Random House (New York City), 1990.
-The Master of Petersburg, Viking, 1994.
-Disgrace, Viking Penguin, 2000 (First Published in Great Britain by
Martin Secker & Warburg 1999)
OTHER
WRITINGS
-White
Writing: On the Culture of Letters in South Africa. New Haven, Connecticut,
Yale University Press, 1988.
-Doubling the Point. Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1992.
-Editor, with André Brink, A Land Apart: A South African Reader.
London, Faber, 1986; New York, Viking, 1987.
-Translator, A Posthumous Confession, by Marcellus Emants. Boston,
Twayne, 1976; London, Quartet, 1986.
-Translator, The Expedition to the Baobab Tree, by Wilma
Stockenström. Johannesburg, Ball, 1983
-Boyhood: Scenes from Provincial Life, Viking (New York City), 1997.
http://www.english.emory.edu/Bahri/Coetzee.html
Academic year 2008/2009
© a.r.e.a./Dr.Vicente Forés López
© José Nicanor Liberos Mascarell
jolimas@alumni.uv.es
Universitat de Valčncia Press