2 - Memory and disenchantment in Nadine Gordimer’s None to Accompany Me and Zoe Wicomb’s Playing in the Light
Corresponding Author(s) : Zuhmboshi Eric Nsuh
African Sociological Review,
Vol. 17 No. 2 (2013): African Sociological Review
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to show how Nadine Gordimer, in None to Accompany Me and Zoe Wicomb, in Playing in the Light have represented the past in their post-Apartheid novels and how it has influenced the ontological situation of the characters in the above texts in question. This paper is, therefore, based on the premise that the behaviour and present conditions of the characters in the works of the above novelists have been shaped by the trauma of their past. It is for this reason that the characters look at the past with anger and acrimony against those who perpetrated acts of nefariousness against them.
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- Adam, Heribert and Hermann Giliomee. Ethnic Power: Can South Africa Change. New Haven:Yale U.P.,
- Bakieva, A. Gulnara. Social Memory and Contemporaneity. Washington: The Council, 2007. Bernstein, Richard. The Restructuring of Social and Political Theory. Oxford: Methuen, 1976. Deacon, Harriet. “Remembering Tragedy, Constructing Modernity: Robben Island as a National Monument”. Negotiating the Past: The Making of Memory in South Africa.Eds. Sarah Nuttall and Carli Coetzee: Oxford, Oxford U. P, 1998. 161-179.
- Gordimer, Nadine. None to Accompany Me. New York: Penguin, 1994. Jooste, Pamela. Frieda and Min, London: Black Swan, 1997.
- Mannheim, Karl. “The Sociology of Knowledge.”
- Ritzer, George. Classical Sociological Theory. 5th. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2000. Shamuyarira, M.N.
- Squire, R. Larry, Richard D. Mckee, 1995, “Biology of Memory”. Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry/vi, eds. Harold I. Kaplan and Benjamin J. Sadock, 6th edition, vol.1, Baltimore, Williams & Wilkins, 1995. 317-327.
- Taylor, Richard. Understanding the Elements of Literature. London: Macmillan, 1981. Wicomb, Zoe. Playing in the Light. Johannesburg: Umuzi, 2006.
References
Adam, Heribert and Hermann Giliomee. Ethnic Power: Can South Africa Change. New Haven:Yale U.P.,
Bakieva, A. Gulnara. Social Memory and Contemporaneity. Washington: The Council, 2007. Bernstein, Richard. The Restructuring of Social and Political Theory. Oxford: Methuen, 1976. Deacon, Harriet. “Remembering Tragedy, Constructing Modernity: Robben Island as a National Monument”. Negotiating the Past: The Making of Memory in South Africa.Eds. Sarah Nuttall and Carli Coetzee: Oxford, Oxford U. P, 1998. 161-179.
Gordimer, Nadine. None to Accompany Me. New York: Penguin, 1994. Jooste, Pamela. Frieda and Min, London: Black Swan, 1997.
Mannheim, Karl. “The Sociology of Knowledge.”
Ritzer, George. Classical Sociological Theory. 5th. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2000. Shamuyarira, M.N.
Squire, R. Larry, Richard D. Mckee, 1995, “Biology of Memory”. Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry/vi, eds. Harold I. Kaplan and Benjamin J. Sadock, 6th edition, vol.1, Baltimore, Williams & Wilkins, 1995. 317-327.
Taylor, Richard. Understanding the Elements of Literature. London: Macmillan, 1981. Wicomb, Zoe. Playing in the Light. Johannesburg: Umuzi, 2006.