Rendering Things Visible: Essays on South African Literary CultureMartin Trump Much recent critical practice, sharpened by an engagement with theory, has questioned conventional notions about literature. There has been a tendency to democratize our understanding of literature, so as to include a wide range of cultural practices that might formerly have been excluded from literary-critical concern. In addition, more attention is being paid to the conditions surrounding literary production and teaching. Critical projects of this kind have a particular urgency and relevance in South Africa today. The country is characterized by processes of repression and democratic struggle. Debates about South African literature take place within a context where there are intimate links between political and literary discourses. The essays in this book reveal the complex and arguably inevitable politicization of South African literary culture. |
Contents
LiteraryIntellectual Behaviour in South Africa 1 | 19 |
The Problem of History in the Fiction of J M Coetzee | 94 |
Storytelling and Politics in Fiction | 186 |
Copyright | |