One of Nadine Gordimer‟s major obsessions has been raising awareness about the unjust and discriminatory policy of apartheid law in South Africa. She has dramatised the history of her country in her fictions to expose more awareness and truth of the unfair political situation of her homeland to the world. This study explores Nadine Gordimer‟s July’s People to analyze the effects of an impromptu journey of the Smales, a white family, into their black servant‟s hinterland. Apartheid atrocities and racial segregations of the white government of South Africa caused an interregnum of white reign and consequently led to black insurgency, tumult, sudden abandonment of home and therefore displacement of the Smales family. This deracination into the...
Nadine Gordimer has examined two types of ideologies in some of her novels. It is because her countr...
Nadine Gordimer, the first Nobel Prize winner of South Africa reflects in her fiction the heart rend...
This article begins by scrutinizing divergent critical views of Gordimer’s subject position and auth...
One of Nadine Gordimer‟s major obsessions has been raising awareness about the unjust and discrimina...
Nadine Gordimer’s much celebrated novel, July’s People (1981), largely narrates the story of white a...
Nadine Gordimer’s July’s People (1981) foresees the inevitable collapse of White South Africa and th...
Nadine Gordimer’s most recent novel, The Pickup, is a novel that has its place in what Gordimer has ...
This paper has probed into South Africa’s newly constructed identity subsequent to the dethronement ...
Analisa-se o conto “Not for publication” (1965), da escritora sulafricanaNadine Gordimer...
The prevailing geopolitical situation has perpetuated epistemic and ontological violence against the...
The prevailing geopolitical situation has perpetuated epistemic and ontological violence against the...
(First paragraph) Growing up in South Africa where only 5.6 million people are white out of a popula...
-In this article he examines the social identity crisis of White South Africans in Nadine Gordimer’s...
Masters of Art Information Technology and Governance . University of KwaZulu-Natal. Durban, 2017.Thi...
This paper seeks to analyze the dystopian character of Nadine Gordimer’s No Time Like the Present an...
Nadine Gordimer has examined two types of ideologies in some of her novels. It is because her countr...
Nadine Gordimer, the first Nobel Prize winner of South Africa reflects in her fiction the heart rend...
This article begins by scrutinizing divergent critical views of Gordimer’s subject position and auth...
One of Nadine Gordimer‟s major obsessions has been raising awareness about the unjust and discrimina...
Nadine Gordimer’s much celebrated novel, July’s People (1981), largely narrates the story of white a...
Nadine Gordimer’s July’s People (1981) foresees the inevitable collapse of White South Africa and th...
Nadine Gordimer’s most recent novel, The Pickup, is a novel that has its place in what Gordimer has ...
This paper has probed into South Africa’s newly constructed identity subsequent to the dethronement ...
Analisa-se o conto “Not for publication” (1965), da escritora sulafricanaNadine Gordimer...
The prevailing geopolitical situation has perpetuated epistemic and ontological violence against the...
The prevailing geopolitical situation has perpetuated epistemic and ontological violence against the...
(First paragraph) Growing up in South Africa where only 5.6 million people are white out of a popula...
-In this article he examines the social identity crisis of White South Africans in Nadine Gordimer’s...
Masters of Art Information Technology and Governance . University of KwaZulu-Natal. Durban, 2017.Thi...
This paper seeks to analyze the dystopian character of Nadine Gordimer’s No Time Like the Present an...
Nadine Gordimer has examined two types of ideologies in some of her novels. It is because her countr...
Nadine Gordimer, the first Nobel Prize winner of South Africa reflects in her fiction the heart rend...
This article begins by scrutinizing divergent critical views of Gordimer’s subject position and auth...