Writing Out of All the Camps

Regular price €59.99
A01=Laura Wright
african
Author_Laura Wright
Barbarian Girl
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Category=DSBH
Cattle Killing
coetzee's
Coetzee's Critics
Coetzee's Fiction
Coetzee's Narrative
Coetzee's Representations
Coetzee's Text
Coetzee's Work
Coetzee's Writing
Colonel Joll
elizabeth
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Eugene Dawn
fiction
gordimer
Jacobus Coetzee
Kafka's Hunger Artist
literature
Lucy's Rape
Michael Green
Mike Marais
Mother's Ashes
nadine
Nadine Gordimer
narrative
Robinson Cruso
south
South African Literature
Sue Kossew
Sympathetic Imagination
Vice Versa
work
Xhosa Cattle Killing

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415802888
  • Weight: 272g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jul 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Writing "Out of all the Camps": J. M. Coetzee's Narratives of Displacement is an interdisciplinary examination--combining ethical, postcolonial, performance, gender-based, and environmental theory--of the ways that 2003 Nobel Prize-winning South African novelist J. M. Coetzee, primarily through his voicing of a female subject position and his presentation of a voiceless subjectivity, the animal, displaces both the narrative and authorial voice in his works of fiction. Coetzee's work remains outside of conventional notions of genre by virtue of the free indirect discourse that characterizes many of his third-person narrated texts that feature male protagonists (Life & Times of Michael K, The Master of Petersburg, and Disgrace), various and differing first-person narrative accounts of the same story (Dusklands, In the Heart of the Country), the use of female narrators and female narrative personas (Age of Iron, The Lives of Animals), and unlocatable, ahistorical contexts (Waiting for the Barbarians). The work has broad academic appeal in the established fields of not only literary studies--postcolonial, contemporary, postmodern and environmental--but also in the realm of performance and gender studies. Because of its broad and interdisciplinary range, this text bridges a conspicuous gap in studies on Coetzee.

Laura Wright is Assistant Professor of English at Western Carolina University. Her primary areas of interest and scholarship include contemporary postcolonial and world literature, environmental theory, and performance studies. She has published work in Mosaic, the Journal of Commonwealth and Postcolonial Studies, the Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, African Studies Review, and Minnesota Review.