This essay is a comparative analysis of three novels and a range of short stories by Nadine Gordimer, examining her changing presentation of the interrelations between space and identity. Using theoretical perspectives derived from feminism and cultural geography, it argues that Gordimer’s evocation of place is always politically charged but that there is a discernible shift in the underlying political ideology in the period between Burger’s Daughter (1979) and The Pickup (2001). The essay suggests that Gordimer inserts theoretical ruminations on space and identity into her work and that she tends to revisit previous theories and revise them in later works. Particularly apparent is a different interpretation of gendered spaces in the later ...
This article assesses the crucial role played by placelessness in the fiction of a writer who never ...
This article explores the different ways in which literary texts can help us negotiate our sense of ...
International audienceDespite Gordimer’s radical engagement with the politics of South Africa, her ...
Nadine Gordimer’s fictional characters embody unease and often resentment with social class, expecte...
This paper aims to study the relation between space and power in Nadine Gordimer’s first novel of t...
How does the South African writer Nadine Gordimer handle the post- apartheid period in her works? Th...
This article is an attempt to examine Nadine Gordimer’s The Pickup (2001) using Homi K. Bhabha’s ide...
This open access book explores literary works and practices – always existing in the dynamic relatio...
More than ten years ago, in Culture and Imperialism, Said identified migration as the road map to in...
This dissertation offers a new exploration of the relationship between geographic awareness and lite...
This paper aims to explore the process of acculturation in the Nobel Laureate Nadine Gordimer’s nove...
Novelist, playwright, short-story writer, polemicist and activist, Nadine Gordimer (1929), received ...
Nadine Gordimer’s most recent novel, The Pickup, is a novel that has its place in what Gordimer has ...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 88-101.Introduction -- Chapter 1: Gender, space and narrative...
“(Re)Placing Nations: Postcolonial Women’s Contestations of Spatial Discourses” reads the proliferat...
This article assesses the crucial role played by placelessness in the fiction of a writer who never ...
This article explores the different ways in which literary texts can help us negotiate our sense of ...
International audienceDespite Gordimer’s radical engagement with the politics of South Africa, her ...
Nadine Gordimer’s fictional characters embody unease and often resentment with social class, expecte...
This paper aims to study the relation between space and power in Nadine Gordimer’s first novel of t...
How does the South African writer Nadine Gordimer handle the post- apartheid period in her works? Th...
This article is an attempt to examine Nadine Gordimer’s The Pickup (2001) using Homi K. Bhabha’s ide...
This open access book explores literary works and practices – always existing in the dynamic relatio...
More than ten years ago, in Culture and Imperialism, Said identified migration as the road map to in...
This dissertation offers a new exploration of the relationship between geographic awareness and lite...
This paper aims to explore the process of acculturation in the Nobel Laureate Nadine Gordimer’s nove...
Novelist, playwright, short-story writer, polemicist and activist, Nadine Gordimer (1929), received ...
Nadine Gordimer’s most recent novel, The Pickup, is a novel that has its place in what Gordimer has ...
Theoretical thesis.Bibliography: pages 88-101.Introduction -- Chapter 1: Gender, space and narrative...
“(Re)Placing Nations: Postcolonial Women’s Contestations of Spatial Discourses” reads the proliferat...
This article assesses the crucial role played by placelessness in the fiction of a writer who never ...
This article explores the different ways in which literary texts can help us negotiate our sense of ...
International audienceDespite Gordimer’s radical engagement with the politics of South Africa, her ...