This article applies principles of new historicism to show that A Sport of Nature can be read as Gordimer\u27s attempt to persuade South African artists to reject mere protest art and to shift art beyond the trap of oppositional forces in South Africa\u27s history today. The text calls instead—via fiction and the imagination—for a new post-apartheid art that will generate creative possibilities for a future South Africa. Gordimer\u27s protagonist, Hillela Capran, is read as a metaphor for the white South African artist who, like Hillela, struggles for an authentic identity and meaningful role in the evolving history of South Africa. This paper asserts that A Sport of Nature boldly proposes the mutation necessary for the South African artist...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1997.The aim of this study is to suggest, by selective e...
As early as 1959, the white South African novelist, essayist, and short story writer Nadine Gordimer...
(First paragraph) Growing up in South Africa where only 5.6 million people are white out of a popula...
The impetus for this paper, and also its centre of concern is the puzzlement, spilling over into pla...
The article investigates the narrative modes and strategies through which the 'new' Gordimer of "Bee...
This article begins by scrutinizing divergent critical views of Gordimer’s subject position and auth...
This article examines the evolution of magical realism as a narrative style used by African writers ...
Nadine Gordimer’s July’s People (1981) foresees the inevitable collapse of White South Africa and th...
The paper analyses the new perspectives in Nadine Gordimer’s writings, focusing on her post-Aparthei...
Nadine Gordimer, the first Nobel Prize winner of South Africa reflects in her fiction the heart rend...
This volume collects three decades of interviews with Nadine Gordimer. In the interviews, she presen...
Nadine Gordimer’s most recent novel, The Pickup, is a novel that has its place in what Gordimer has ...
-In this article he examines the social identity crisis of White South Africans in Nadine Gordimer’s...
The aim of this article is to shed light on Nadine Gordimer’s political convictions in the context o...
This paper seeks to analyze the dystopian character of Nadine Gordimer’s No Time Like the Present an...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1997.The aim of this study is to suggest, by selective e...
As early as 1959, the white South African novelist, essayist, and short story writer Nadine Gordimer...
(First paragraph) Growing up in South Africa where only 5.6 million people are white out of a popula...
The impetus for this paper, and also its centre of concern is the puzzlement, spilling over into pla...
The article investigates the narrative modes and strategies through which the 'new' Gordimer of "Bee...
This article begins by scrutinizing divergent critical views of Gordimer’s subject position and auth...
This article examines the evolution of magical realism as a narrative style used by African writers ...
Nadine Gordimer’s July’s People (1981) foresees the inevitable collapse of White South Africa and th...
The paper analyses the new perspectives in Nadine Gordimer’s writings, focusing on her post-Aparthei...
Nadine Gordimer, the first Nobel Prize winner of South Africa reflects in her fiction the heart rend...
This volume collects three decades of interviews with Nadine Gordimer. In the interviews, she presen...
Nadine Gordimer’s most recent novel, The Pickup, is a novel that has its place in what Gordimer has ...
-In this article he examines the social identity crisis of White South Africans in Nadine Gordimer’s...
The aim of this article is to shed light on Nadine Gordimer’s political convictions in the context o...
This paper seeks to analyze the dystopian character of Nadine Gordimer’s No Time Like the Present an...
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1997.The aim of this study is to suggest, by selective e...
As early as 1959, the white South African novelist, essayist, and short story writer Nadine Gordimer...
(First paragraph) Growing up in South Africa where only 5.6 million people are white out of a popula...