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Monday, March 30, 2015
English Language Teaching in India: Problems and Prospects August 2015
Silver Jubilee Year 2015-2016
Organised by
Workshops on Technology & Second language Acquisition 1-6 May 2015
Workshops
on
Technology &
Second language Acquisition
1-6 May 2015
Regional English Language Office
Bengaluru
Workshops
on
Technology &
Second language Acquisition
1-6 May 2015
Saturday, March 28, 2015
8th National Conference on Methods and Outcomes of Research in English
SRM University
The Department of English and Foreign Languages
Faculty of Engineering and Technology
8th National Conference
on
Methods and Outcomes of Research in English
on March 31, 2015
8th National Conference
on
Methods and Outcomes of Research in English
8th National Conference
on
Methods and Outcomes of Research in English
Isak Dinesen
Isak Dinesen
Dinesen, Isak, pseudonym
of Baroness Karen Christence Blixen-Finecke, née Dinesen (1885-1962), Danish
writer, born in Rungsted. She studied painting in various European cities. In
1914 she married her cousin, Baron Bror Blixen-Finecke, and went to live in
British East Africa (now Kenya) on a coffee plantation. After her divorce in
1921 she remained in Africa, returning to Denmark in 1931. Her first book of
stories, Seven Gothic Tales (1934),
dealt in highly polished and subtle prose with the world of the supernatural, as
did most of her later fiction. Out of
Africa (1937), which was made into a movie released in 1985, was based on
her experiences on the plantation. Her only novel, The Angelic Avengers (1944; trans. 1947), was published under the
name Pierre Andrézel; it describes in allegorical terms the plight of Denmark
during the German occupation in World War II. Dinesen's later works include Winter's Tales (1943); Last Tales (1957), another collection of
stories of the supernatural; and Shadows
on the Grass (1960), Sketches of
African life. She wrote both the Danish version and the English version of
all her works.
Doris Lessing
Doris Lessing
Doris Lessing is one of
the most prolific and celebrated authors writing in English today. Her work
ranges from realistic early novels, many of which draw directly from her
African childhood, to later books that experiment with literary genre
(including science fiction) and form. In addition, Lessing has written poetry,
drama, nonfiction, and a series of memoirs. Deeply influenced by her early
exposure to racial, class, and sexual inequality, Lessing raises in her writing
questions about politics, society, religion, work, and family—meditations at
the heart of her most influential work, The
Golden Notebook (1962).After two marriages and two divorces, in 1949 Lessing
moved from Salisbury (the Southern Rhodesian capital, now Harare, Zimbabwe) to
London, England, taking with her only the youngest of her three children. She
also brought the manuscript that would become her first novel, The Grass is Singing (1950). Literary
success came quickly; over the next ten years, Lessing published four more
novels, in addition to stories, plays, reviews, and essays. She gained a
reputation as a writer whose work probed both the personal and the
political—particularly for women.. Along with her interest in racial and gender
politics and intergenerational relationships, Lessing began to draw from the
teachings of Sufism, a mystical form of Islam. Hints of the supernatural in the
series' last entry are expanded in the five-volume science-fiction series Canopus in Argos: Archives (1979-1983).
Later novels include The Good Terrorist
(1985), The Fifth Child (1988), and Love, Again (1996); works focused on
Africa include Collected African Stories
(1973), African Laughter (1992), and Going Home (1996). Lessing has also
published two volumes of her ongoing autobiography, Under my Skin (1994) and Walking
in the Shade (1997). Critics praise Lessing's fierce, unsentimental honesty
and her unique imagination, and many consider her one of the finest novelists
writing in English today.
Aimé Césaire
Aimé Césaire
Innovative Martinican poet, playwright, and political leader, a founder of the
Négritude movement and one of the most important black authors writing in
French in the 20th century. As a historical movement, Négritude received two competing interpretations. Césaire's
original conception sees the specificity and unity of black existence as a
historically developing phenomenon that arose through the highly contingent
events of the African slave trade and New World plantation system. This
formulation was gradually displaced in intellectual debate by Senghor's
essentialist interpretation of Négritude, which argues for an unchanging core
or essence to black existence. As this later formulation gained currency, it
was widely attacked, all the more so as Senghor, then president of an
independent Senegal, came to use the term ideologically to justify his own
political platform. Senghor's Négritude nonetheless served to reverse the
system of values that had informed Western perception of blacks since the
earliest voyages of discovery to Africa. Césaire's developmental model of
Négritude, on the other hand, continues to offer a model for the ongoing
project of black liberation in all its fullness, at once spiritual and
political.
Chinua Achebe
Chinua Achebe
Nigerian author, whose novel Things Fall Apart (1958) is one of the most widely
read and discussed works of African fiction. In his first novel, Things Fall Apart, Achebe retold the
history of colonization from the point of view of the colonized. The novel
depicted the first contact between the Igbo people and European missionaries
and administrators. Since its publication, Things
Fall Apart has generated a wealth of literary criticism grappling with
Achebe's unsentimental representations of tradition, religion, manhood, and the
colonial experience. Immediately successful, the novel secured Achebe's
position both in Nigeria and in the West as a preeminent voice among Africans
writing in English.Achebe subsequently wrote several novels that spanned more
than a century of African history. Although most of these works deal
specifically with Nigeria, they are also emblematic of what Achebe calls the
"metaphysical landscape" of Africa, "a view of the world and of
the whole cosmos perceived from a particular position." No Longer at Ease (1960) tells the story
of a young man sent by his village to study overseas who then returns to a
government job in Nigeria only to find himself in a culturally fragmented
world. As the young man sinks into materialism and corruption, Achebe
represents a new generation caught in a moral and spiritual conflict between
the modern and the traditional. Arrow of
God (1964) returns to the colonial period of 1920s Nigeria. In this novel,
Achebe focuses on a theme that underscores all of his work: the wielding of
power and its deployment for the good or harm of a community. A Man of the People (1966), a work
Achebe has characterized as "an indictment of independent Africa," is
set in the context of the emerging African nation-state. Representing a nation
thought to be based on Nigeria, Achebe portrays the vacuum of true leadership
left by the destruction of the governance provided by the traditional village.
Achebe's critical political commentary continues in Anthills of the Savannah (1987), in which he uses a complex
mythical structure to depict an African nation passing into the shadow of a
military dictatorship.Achebe helped found a publishing company in Nigeria with
poet Christopher Okigbo and in 1971 was a founding editor for the prominent
African literary magazine Okike. In
addition, he published children's books and award-winning poetry
collections.Responding to critics such as Ngugi wa Thiong'o, who point to the
political and cultural implications of writing in the colonial language, Achebe
has defended his use of English, asserting that as a "medium of
international exchange," the language is a lingua franca (common language)
that will connect the communities of Africa."Art is man's constant effort
to create for himself a different order of reality from that which is given to
him," Achebe wrote in his essay "The Truth of Fiction."
Christopher Okigbo
Christopher Okigbo
Nigerian poet, who within his short lifetime established himself
as a central figure in the development of modern poetry in Africa and as one of
the most important African poets to write in English.The two collections of
verse that appeared during Okigbo’s lifetime established him as an innovative
and controversial poet, although his poetry also appeared in the important West
African cultural magazines Black Orpheus and Transition. The two collections—Heavensgate (1962) and Limits (1964)—reveal a personal,
introspective poetry informed by a familiarity with Western myths and filled
with rich, startling images.
Wole Soyinka
Wole Soyinka
Nigerian playwright, poet, novelist, and lecturer, whose writings draw on
African tradition and mythology while employing Western literary forms. In 1986 Soyinka became the first African
writer and the first black writer to win the Nobel Prize for literature.He
established the 1960 Masks drama troupe (later the Orisun Theatre) and produced
his own plays and those of other African playwrights. Soyinka often wrote about
the need for individual freedom. His plays include A Dance of the Forests (1960), written to celebrate Nigeria’s
independence in 1960; Kongi’s Harvest
(1965), a political satire; Death and the
King’s Horseman (1975); A Play of
Giants (1984); and From Zia, with
Love (1992). His other writings include the novels The Interpreters (1965), about a group of young Nigerian
intellectuals, and Season of Anomy
(1973); the poetry collections Idanre
(1967) and Mandela’s Earth (1988);
the critical work Myth, Literature, and
the African World (1976); the autobiographical books Ake: The Years of Childhood (1981) and Isara (1989); and the essay collection The Credo of Being and Nothingness (1991).
Amos Tutuola
Amos Tutuola (1920-1997)
Nigerian novelist and short-story writer, whose first published novel, The Palm-Wine Drinkard (1952), received
international recognition and led to the subsequent surge of interest in
African literature in English. Tutuola's books, written in an idiosyncratic
English, engage readers vividly in the myth and legend of the Yoruba, an
African people inhabiting southwest Nigeria. Imaginative journeys involving
encounters with the supernatural—ghosts, demons, and magic—serve as means to
spiritual growth and the acquisition of wisdom. Tutuola's ability to recreate
in written form the Yoruba oral tradition and to rework and modernize the
folklore to his own ends has made his work unique.His other works include My Life in the Bush of Ghosts (1954), Simbi and the Satyr of the Dark Jungle (1954),
The Brave African Huntress (1958), Feather Woman of the Jungle (1962), Ajaiyi and His Inherited Poverty (1967),
The Witch-Herbalist of the Remote Town
(1981), The Wild Hunter in the Bush of
Ghosts (1982), Pauper, Brawler and
Slanderer (1987), and The Village
Witch Doctor (1990).
Ben Okri
Ben Okri
Nigerian novelist, poet, and short-story writer, who achieved international
recognition with his third novel, The
Famished Road (1991), which won Britain's top literary award, the Booker
Prize. Okri had been writing for several years and had published his first
novel, Flowers and Shadows (1980).
During his three years at Essex, he published a second novel, The Landscapes Within (1982). Between
1984 and 1985, Okri worked for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) World
Service, as a radio broadcaster on the “Network Africa” program. He was poetry
editor of West Africa magazine from 1980 to 1987. Critical interest in Okri's
writing was first generated by his short story collection Incidents at the Shrine (1987), which won the Commonwealth Writers
Prize for Africa. Another collection of short stories, Stars of the New Curfew (1988), in which, Okri seeks to present a
resolution between African mysticism and Western modernism. The Famished Road is a tale of an
African “spirit-child.” Okri's works also include a volume of incantatory
poems, An African Elegy (1992) as
well as a sequel to The Famished Road,
Songs of Enchantment (1993). In 1995
he published Astonishing the Gods, a
quest-fable about suffering, power, and fame inspired by the works of Swiss
writer Hermann Hesse and Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges.
Buchi Emecheta
Buchi Emecheta
Nigerian writer, whose works explore the joys and sorrows of African women as
they struggle with patriarchal dominance, neocolonialism, economic
exploitation, and racism.Emecheta's first novels, In the Ditch (1972) and Second
Class Citizen (1974), drew upon her experiences as a member of London's
working class. These works were followed by three novels set in the region of
Nigeria where Emecheta was born: The
Bride Price (1976), the manuscript of which once had been burned by her
husband; The Slave Girl (1977); and The Joys of Motherhood (1979). All three
are significant critiques of gender relations in African societies. The Joys of Motherhood has been
considered Emecheta's best novel. It follows the life of a woman consumed by
the societal demands of motherhood. The novel Destination Biafra (1982) is Emecheta's response to the civil
conflict in the late 1960s that threatened to divide Nigeria. Her book Double Yoke (1983) deals with the sexual
harassment of female students by male professors and with the struggles of
educated African women. In The Rape of
Shavi (1983), Emecheta explores the theme of the European exploitation of
Africa in the setting of a fictional African country called Shavi. The novels Gwendolen (1989) and Kehinde (1994) are set in London. In Gwendolen Emecheta writes about a
Jamaican family in a style reminiscent of the work of American author Alice
Walker.In Kehinde, the protagonist,
with the support of her women friends, leaves a polygamous marriage to create
her own life. Emecheta also wrote an autobiography, Head Above Water (1986); the children's stories Titch the Cat (1979) and Nowhere to Play (1980); literature for
young adults, including The Moonlight Bride
(1980), The Wrestling Match (1980), Naira Power (1982), and A Kind of Marriage (1986); radio and
television plays; and several works of criticism.
Cyprian Ekwensi
Cyprian Ekwensi
Nigerian novelist, short-story writer, and children’s author, who has portrayed
the moral and material problems besetting rural West Africans as they migrate
to the city. A prolific and popular writer, he owes his immense success to his
ability to write realistically about current issues affecting ordinary
people.His first published success came with the novella When Love Whispers (1948). People
of the City (1954), a collection of short stories tied together almost as a
novel, chronicles the frantic pace of life in modern Lagos, Nigeria’s former
capital.His most successful novel, Jagua
Nana (1961),tells the story of a vibrant middle-aged prostitute who moves
between the corrupt, pleasure-seeking life of the city and the pastoral life of
her rural origins. Ekwensi continued his career as a writer, reflecting on the
war and its aftermath in the novels Survive
the Peace (1976) and Divided We Stand
(1980). In 1986 he published a sequel to Jagua
Nana called Jagua Nana’s Daughter.
His children’s books include The Passport
of Mallam Ilia (1960), The Drummer
Boy (1960), and Juju Rock (1966).
Ngugi wa Thiong’o
Ngugi wa Thiong’o
Kenyan novelist and playwright, many of whose works concern issues of Kenyan
independence. Born James Thiong'o Ngugi in Kamiriithu, he changed his name in
the late 1960s. Ngugi's first novel, Weep
Not, Child (1964), was published while he was at school in England. Having
returned to Kenya after finishing his studies, Ngugi's second novel The River Between (1965), had as its
background the Mau Mau rebellion (1952-1956), in which a group of the Kikuyu
people began a campaign of violence against the British, who controlled Kenya
at the time. This subject re-emerged in A
Grain of Wheat (1967), a novel in which Mau Mau bloodshed is set against
celebrations of Kenyan independence. The impact of Ngugi's next novel, Petals of Blood (1977), a story
discussing the poor quality of life in East Africa, particularly for Kenya's
lower classes, even after independence from the United Kingdom in 1963, led to
his detention in 1978 under Kenya's Public Security Act. He recounted his
prison experience in Detained: A Writer's
Prison Diary (1981). The play Ngaahika
Ndeenda (1977; I Will Marry When I
Want, 1982) held that those who had fought the hardest for independence had
gained the least, a theme Ngugi returned to in the novel Matigari (1989).Ngugi's works of criticism include Moving the Centre (1993).
Nadine Gordimer
Nadine Gordimer
South African novelist and short-story writer, known for her realistic
character dialogue and passionate writing. She
won the Nobel Prize for literature in 1991. Fueled by feelings of
frustration with the social and political predicament of a racially divided
South Africa, Gordimer's writing reflects her anger at racism and political
censorship.Her first story was published when she was 15 years old. Her first
major collection of stories, The Soft
Voice of the Serpent (1952), was followed by Six Feet of the Country (1956), Friday's
Footprint (1960), and Not for
Publication (1965). These books present incidents of everyday life in South
Africa, often from the point of view of a white middle-class character. They
examine the tensions between white and non-white people forced to live under
apartheid, the system of rigid racial segregation formerly in effect in South
Africa. Gordimer's novels A World of
Strangers (1958), Occasion for Loving
(1963), and The Late Bourgeois World
(1966) also address these themes.In her books, Gordimer sympathetically
presents the position of nonwhites while conveying the conflicting feelings of
liberal whites who live under a system they believe to be wrong. Her novel The Conservationist (1974), about a
white man's exploitation of his black employees for personal gain, was a joint
winner in 1974 of the Booker Prize, Britain's most prestigious literary award. Burger's Daughter (1979) explores a
white woman's divided feelings about apartheid when her father is imprisoned
for opposing the system. July's People
(1981) looks into the future, depicting a white family trying to escape from a
civil war by depending upon their black servants. In My Son's Story (1990), a young black man tries to understand the
conflicts of the private and public life of his father. None to Accompany Me (1994), set in postapartheid South Africa, concerns
a woman who seeks self-understanding through her devotion to political causes. Writing and Being (1995) is a collection
of essays.
Thursday, March 26, 2015
TS RJC SET 2015
Government of Telangana
For Admission to Telangana State Residential Junior Colleges
Admission Notification 2015
TS RJC SET 2015
For more information visit http://tsrjdc.cgg.gov.in or http://residential.cgg.gov.in
Government of Telangana
For Admission to Telangana State Residential Junior Colleges
Admission Notification 2015
TS RJC SET 2015
The 1st International Conference on English Language and Literature ICELL 2015
ICELL 2015
The 1st International Conference on English Language and Literature
20-21 November, Tirana, Albania
Conferences of Language and Literature are apparently becoming a trend in the academic world preoccupied with various ways of understanding language, literature and culture. In addition to their interrelations and interdependence, the new ideas and approaches emerging from various disciplines like literary theory, philosophy, anthropology, linguistics, pragmatics and discourse analysis alongside technological revolution and socio-cultural transformations, have a bearing on our study of language and literature. The conference aims at exploring the dynamics with a focus on the complementary nature of English language, literature and culture and their centrality in human life.
IMPORTANT DATES
30 APRIL 2015
Abstract submission31 MAY 2015
Abstract confirmation of acceptance30 JULY 2015
Full paper submission31 AUGUST 2015
Paper confirmation of acceptance20-21 NOV 2015
Conference
For more information visit website
for more details click here
2nd International Conference on English Language, British and American Studies 2015
CALL FOR PAPERS
2nd International Conference on English Language, British and American Studies
INTERNATIONAL BALKAN UNIVERSITY (IBU)
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND AMERICAN STUDIES (ELAS)
SKOPJE, MACEDONIA
FACULTY OF LANGUAGES
CALL FOR PAPERS
Department of English Language and American Studies (ELAS) is pleased to announce its 2nd international conference on English Language, British and American Studies, which will be held on May 29, 2015.
The conference will address topics from the fields of
- English and American Studies
- English Literature
- American Literature
- Literatures in English
- English Language Teaching
- Linguistics
- Translation
Abstracts for proposed papers (maximum 250 words) should be submitted to elasconference@gmail.com.Please include your name, affiliation, e-mail address, and a brief biography, along with 5-6 keywords pertaining to your topic. The deadline for proposals is April 10, 2015. Conference language is English. Registration fee is 50 euro to be paid on site upon arrival. Confirmed abstracts will be published in a conference abstract book. A selection of papers will also be published after the conference in the proceedings. Prior to publication, papers will be refereed by an editorial committee.
Conference Venue: IBU Main Building, Tashko Karadja. 11A, Avtokomanda, Skopje.
For inquiries, please contact Asst. Prof. Dr. Benjamin Shultz at elasconference@gmail.com
For more information click here
for more details visit website
The International Conference on Challenges in ELT & English Literature (CELT-EL 2015)
The International Conference on Challenges in ELT & English Literature (CELT-EL 2015)
The International Conference on Challenges in ELT & English Literature (CELT-EL 2015) is held by the Department of English Language and Linguistics,Islamic Azad University (I.A.U.), Ahar Branch. The conference provides a unique opportunity for scholars,academicians,and students from all over the world to share not only their invaluable experiences but also their research findings on various areas of English Language Teaching (ELT),English Literature,Translation Studies,General Linguistics and other major branches of applied linguistics.
For more information click here
For more details visit website
9th International IDEA Conference “Studies in English” 2015
9th International IDEA Conference “Studies in English”
15-17 April 2015
Department of Western Languages and Literatures, İnönü University,
is proud to host the 9th International IDEA Conference “Studies in English” in collaboration with IDEA (English Language and Research Association of Turkey)
For more information click here
For more details visit website
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
National Conference on New Trends in the Asian Literatures in English 28th August 2015
UGC & Dr B A M U, A'bad Sponsored
National Conference on
New Trends in the Asian Literatures in English
28th August 2015
Shri Panditguru Pardikar Mahavidyalaya, Sirsala, Maharashra
English Literature Conferences in India,
National Conference on
New Trends in the Asian Literatures in English
28th August 2015
English Literature Conferences in India,
National Conference on
New Trends in the Asian Literatures in English
28th August 2015
English Literature Conferences in India,
One Day National Seminar on Marginalisation in English Writings April, 2015
One Day National Seminar on Marginalisation in English Writings
Arignar Anna College (Arts and College), Krishnagiri
10 April 2015
PG & Research Department of English, Arignar Anna College (Arts and College), Krishnagiri, TN, India is organising a One Day National Seminar on Marginalisation in English Writings on 10 April 2015.
*SELECT PAPERS WILL BE PUBLISHED*
*Find enclosed the copy of the brochure.*
*Dates to remember*
Ø Submission of Abstract : 18-03-2015
Ø Intimation of Acceptance : 20-03-2015
Ø Submission of full paper : 30-03-2015
Ø Date of Seminar : 10-04-2015
*Registration fee details:*
Ø Faculty & Research Scholars : 1500
Ø PG Students (with publication) : 1000
Ø Participants : 300
*SELECT PAPERS WILL BE PUBLISHED*
*Find enclosed the copy of the brochure.*
*Dates to remember*
Ø Submission of Abstract : 18-03-2015
Ø Intimation of Acceptance : 20-03-2015
Ø Submission of full paper : 30-03-2015
Ø Date of Seminar : 10-04-2015
*Registration fee details:*
Ø Faculty & Research Scholars : 1500
Ø PG Students (with publication) : 1000
Ø Participants : 300
*Contact:*
Prof. T. Karuthappandi : 9688773530
Prof. S. Prakash : 9655478106
Prof. S. Prakash : 9655478106
For more details visit
International Conference on Comparative Literature & Culture Sep 2015
International Conference on Comparative Literature & Culture
Vasantrao Naik Government Institute of Arts and Social Sciences
Nagpur, India
11th & 12th September 2015
Higher Education & Research Society, Navi Mumbai in association with PG Department of Engish, Vasantrao Naik Government Institute of Arts and Social Sciences, Nagpur, India organises an International Conference on Comparative Literature & Culture on 11th & 12th September 2015.
*The Registered Delegates are entitled to get their research paper published online in the Journal of Higher Education & Research Society: A Refereed International (ISSN 2349-0209) Oct. '15/April '16 issue “subject to approval” by the reviewers*
*Find enclosed the copy of the brochure.*
*Dates to remember*
*Registration fee details:*
Registration up to 10th July 2015
INR 2000/- (without accommodation)
INR 3000/- (with accommodation)
Late Registration (After 10th July 2015)
INR 2500/- (without accommodation)
INR 3500/- (with accommodation)
*Contact:*
Dr Sudhir Nikam
A-2, 503, Punyodaya Park
Near Don Bosco School, Adharwadi
Kalyan (West), Thane, India- 421 301
Mobile: +919322530571 / +919405024593
Email: sudhirnikam@gmail.com
For more details visit
*The Registered Delegates are entitled to get their research paper published online in the Journal of Higher Education & Research Society: A Refereed International (ISSN 2349-0209) Oct. '15/April '16 issue “subject to approval” by the reviewers*
*Find enclosed the copy of the brochure.*
*Dates to remember*
- Submission of Abstract : 10-07-2015
- Date of Seminar : 11&12-08-2015
*Registration fee details:*
Registration up to 10th July 2015
INR 2000/- (without accommodation)
INR 3000/- (with accommodation)
Late Registration (After 10th July 2015)
INR 2500/- (without accommodation)
INR 3500/- (with accommodation)
Dr Sudhir Nikam
A-2, 503, Punyodaya Park
Near Don Bosco School, Adharwadi
Kalyan (West), Thane, India- 421 301
Mobile: +919322530571 / +919405024593
Email: sudhirnikam@gmail.com
For more details visit
English Literature Conferences in India
Monday, March 16, 2015
Alan Stewart Paton (1903-1988)
Alan Stewart Paton (1903-1988)
African Writing in English
South African writer and social reformer, whose works condemned
apartheid, the policy of racial separation practiced in South Africa from 1948
until the early 1990s.Paton received great critical and popular acclaim for his
first novel, Cry, the Beloved Country
(1948), which is distinguished by its compassionate treatment of those caught up
in the racial conflicts of South Africa. The work was made into an opera with
music by German American composer Kurt Weill and was adapted for several motion
pictures. Paton’s second novel, Too Late
the Phalarope (1953); his short story collection, Tales from a Troubled Land (1961); and his later novel, Ah, But Your Land Is Beautiful (1982),
also deal with racial tensions in South African society. In 1955 he published The Land and People of South Africa, a
nonfiction work, and in 1968 The Long
View, which deals with apartheid.
Friday, March 13, 2015
John Michael Coetzee
John Michael Coetzee
African Writing in English
South African writer and scholar, who is best known for his novels Waiting for the Barbarians (1980) and The Life and Times of Michael K (1983),
which won the Booker Prize, Britain's highest literary award. Coetzee's novels
often use allegory to question the apartheid regime that governed South Africa
until 1990, or racial conflict of any kind, and to explore the resulting
effects on individuals and society. Coetzee won a second Booker Prize in 1999
for Disgrace, a novel about life in
post-apartheid South Africa.he completed work on two novellas he had already
begun, which were published in one volume as Dusklands in 1974. Both novellas, The Vietnam Project and The
Narrative of Jacobus Coetzee, deal with the dilemmas faced by individuals who
are in conflict with society. Dusklands
was followed by In the Heart of the
Country (1977; published the same year in the United States as From the Heart of the Country, which is
structured as the diary of a woman declining into insanity. Waiting for the Barbarians (1980), the
story of a government magistrate's personal evolution into questioning the
government for which he works, won South Africa's highest literary honor, the
Central News Agency (CNA) Literary Award, in 1980, as did The Life and Times of Michael K (1983), the story of man's physical
and psychological journey through a country at war.Coetzee's other works
include Foe (1986), Age of Iron (1990),
and The Master of Saint Petersburg
(1994), as well as a number of books of essays, among them Doubling the Point: Essays and Interviews (1994). Coetzee has also
translated the works of other authors into Dutch, German, French, and
Afrikaans.
Alex La Guma
Alex La Guma (1925-1985)
African Writing in Englsih
South African writer, who used his writing to give a voice to the black South
Africans oppressed under apartheid, the official policy of racial segregation
followed in South Africa from 1948 to the early 1990s. La Guma's work helped
provide an artistic vision of cultural change that accompanied the efforts of
the more celebrated antiapartheid political figures of South Africa, such as
Nelson Mandela and Stephen Biko.La Guma is best known, however, for his novels,
especially A Walk in the Night (1962),
a short novel that traces the movement of the protagonist, Michael Adonis,
toward criminality as he copes with poverty, police harassment, and racism in
the workplace.La Guma's novel And a
Threefold Cord (1964), set in Cape Town during an unrelenting rainstorm,
focuses on poor black families who live under bleak economic conditions.The
novel The Stone Country (1967)
depicts life in a South African prison, the brutality of which serves as a
metaphor for the experience of black South Africans living under apartheid. La
Guma's other works include the edited volume Apartheid: A Collection of Writings on South African Racism by South
Africans (1971), the autobiographical novel In the Fog of the Seasons' End (1972), the travel book A Soviet Journey (1978), and the novel Time of the Butcherbird (1979).
Es’kia Mphahlele
Es’kia Mphahlele
African Writing in English
South African
writer, best known for his autobiography Down
Second Avenue (1959), which portrays his early life as a black South
African. The characters in Mphahlele's fictional works are drawn with vivid
realism and are portrayed not as victims but as survivors who overcome the
harshness of their lives.Mphahlele's first book, Man Must Live (1947), is a collection of short stories about black
life in South Africa. Down Second Avenue, his second and perhaps most famous
work, achieved great critical and popular success and is considered a classic
of South African literature. The
Wanderers (1971) is an autobiographical novel dealing with themes of exile.
His novel Chirundu (1979) focuses on
the conflicts felt by a fictional African politician. Afrika My Music (1984) is another autobiographical work, describing
Mphahlele's exile and return to South Africa. His novel Father Come Home (1984) is concerned with the suffering caused by
the Natives Land Act of 1913, which restricted blacks from residing in certain
areas in South Africa. Mphahlele's other books include the critical works The African Image (1962) and Voices in the Whirlwind, and Other Essays (1972).
A collection of his letters, Bury Me at
the Marketplace, was published in 1984.
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