The distinguished South African scholar and critic Graham Pechey was one of the leading voices in the debates about literature’s role in the apartheid state, and he continued to reflect influentially on its importance and function after the establishment of democracy. Pechey died in 2016 without putting the finishing touches on a book on South African literature and culture that had been some twenty years in the making. He wrote on a wide range of South African literature across the racial divide and across periods, combining an acute sense of the historical and geopolitical situation of South African writing with a sensitive ear to the workings of the literary; he was thus able to do justice to both the singular grain of individual works and their broad political and cultural implications. This collection brings together the most significant of these essays, organised in a way that reflects his major concerns. Topics addressed include the role of culture in the transition from apartheid to democracy, the specificity of English as a literary medium in South Africa, the freedom of the artist in an authoritarian state, and the global trajectory of South African words. Among the authors discussed are Olive Schreiner, Njabulo Ndebele, Nadine Gordimer, J.M. Coetzee, William Plomer, F.T. Prince, and Roy Campbell.
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This volume brings together the most significant essays on South African literature by the distinguished critic Graham Pechey, who died in 2016. They combine an acute sense of the historical and geopolitical situation of South African writing before, during, and after apartheid with a sensitive ear to literary detail.
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AcknowledgementsBiographical note by Laura PecheyIntroduction by Derek AttridgePart One: South African Literature in Transition: 1990-19981. ‘Cultural Struggle’ and the Narratives of South African Freedom2. Post-Apartheid Narratives3. The Post-Apartheid Sublime: Rediscovering the Extraordinary4. Carnal Knowledge: Reading the Body of South African Writing5. Post-Apartheid Reason: Critical Theory in South AfricaPart Two: Fiction before and after Apartheid6. The Story of an African Farm: Colonial History and the Discontinuous Text7. Antithetical Anti-Heroes: Uses of the Past in Schoeman and Matthee8. The Criticism of Njabulo S. Ndebele9. ‘The Woman’s Rose’: Olive Schreiner, the Short Story and Grand History10. Coetzee’s Purgatorial Africa: The Case of DisgracePart Three: The Language of South African Poetry11. ‘A complex and violent revelation’: Epiphanies of Africa in South African Literature12. Roy Campbell, F. T. Prince and the Lexicon of Emigration13. Periphrases, Portmanteaux, and Plurals: Aspects of Roy Campbell’s Poetic DictionBibliographyIndexNotes
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"This is a richly rewarding volume that confirms Graham Pechey’s status as brilliant critic, thoughtful cultural commentator, and erudite literary historian. The editors have done us a great service in bringing to publication a range of essays -- written across nearly three decades -- that prove a fitting memorial, and will introduce Pechey’s work to the wide readership it deserves."Andrew van der Vlies, University of Adelaide
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781800854901
Publisert
2022-01-19
Utgiver
Vendor
Liverpool University Press
Høyde
239 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
272

Biographical note

Derek Attridge is Emeritus Professor in the Department of English and Related Literature at the University of York. Laura Pechey studied English at the University of KwaZulu Natal before completing her English degree at the University of Leeds and a PhD on animals in nineteenth- and twentieth-century South African writing at the University of Cambridge.