http://dx.doi.org/10.5007/2175-8026.2011n61p199This article is a biographical study of Nadine Gordimer through a dialogue staged between three of her characters–Helen Shaw, Rosa Burger and Vera Stark–and one of her essays. The object of the study is to retrace Nadine Gordimer’s steps in her long journey that allowed her to assume and experience not only a nationality but also a sense of belonging to Africa as an African rather than a colonial
(First paragraph) Growing up in South Africa where only 5.6 million people are white out of a popula...
This paper aims to explore the process of acculturation in the Nobel Laureate Nadine Gordimer’s nove...
In Nadine Gordimer’s The Pickup, Julie Summers finds her sense of place in an unnamed desert country...
The paper analyses the new perspectives in Nadine Gordimer’s writings, focusing on her post-Aparthei...
How does the South African writer Nadine Gordimer handle the post- apartheid period in her works? Th...
Nadine Gordimer’s most recent novel, The Pickup, is a novel that has its place in what Gordimer has ...
The House Gun is the first novel by Nadine Gordimer to be set firmly in post-apartheid South Africa....
This paper has probed into South Africa’s newly constructed identity subsequent to the dethronement ...
-In this article he examines the social identity crisis of White South Africans in Nadine Gordimer’s...
This volume collects three decades of interviews with Nadine Gordimer. In the interviews, she presen...
One of Nadine Gordimer‟s major obsessions has been raising awareness about the unjust and discrimina...
Novelist, playwright, short-story writer, polemicist and activist, Nadine Gordimer (1929), received ...
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...
This article begins by scrutinizing divergent critical views of Gordimer’s subject position and auth...
(First paragraph) Growing up in South Africa where only 5.6 million people are white out of a popula...
This paper aims to explore the process of acculturation in the Nobel Laureate Nadine Gordimer’s nove...
In Nadine Gordimer’s The Pickup, Julie Summers finds her sense of place in an unnamed desert country...
The paper analyses the new perspectives in Nadine Gordimer’s writings, focusing on her post-Aparthei...
How does the South African writer Nadine Gordimer handle the post- apartheid period in her works? Th...
Nadine Gordimer’s most recent novel, The Pickup, is a novel that has its place in what Gordimer has ...
The House Gun is the first novel by Nadine Gordimer to be set firmly in post-apartheid South Africa....
This paper has probed into South Africa’s newly constructed identity subsequent to the dethronement ...
-In this article he examines the social identity crisis of White South Africans in Nadine Gordimer’s...
This volume collects three decades of interviews with Nadine Gordimer. In the interviews, she presen...
One of Nadine Gordimer‟s major obsessions has been raising awareness about the unjust and discrimina...
Novelist, playwright, short-story writer, polemicist and activist, Nadine Gordimer (1929), received ...
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...
This article begins by scrutinizing divergent critical views of Gordimer’s subject position and auth...
(First paragraph) Growing up in South Africa where only 5.6 million people are white out of a popula...
This paper aims to explore the process of acculturation in the Nobel Laureate Nadine Gordimer’s nove...
In Nadine Gordimer’s The Pickup, Julie Summers finds her sense of place in an unnamed desert country...