Original Research

Subverting the pastoral: the transcendence of space and place in J.M. Coetzee’s Disgrace

S. Smit-Marais, M. Wenzel
Literator | Vol 27, No 1 | a177 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/lit.v27i1.177 | © 2006 S. Smit-Marais, M. Wenzel | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 30 July 2006 | Published: 30 July 2006

About the author(s)

S. Smit-Marais, School of Languages: English, Potchefstroom campus, North-West University, South Africa
M. Wenzel, School of Languages: English, Potchefstroom campus, North-West University, South Africa

Full Text:

PDF (149KB)

Abstract

This article investigates how J.M. Coetzee’s “Disgrace” (1999) – portrayed as a postcolonial and postmodern fictional event – embodies, problematises and subverts the vision of the pastoral farm novel tradition by transcending traditional configurations of space and place. The novel offers a rather bleak apocalyptic vision of gender roles, racial relationships and family relations in post-apartheid South Africa and expresses the socio-political tensions pertaining to the South African landscape in terms of personal relationships. As a fictional reworking of the farm novel, “Disgrace” draws on the tradition’s anxieties about the rights of (white) ownership, but within a post-apartheid context. As such, “Disgrace” challenges the pastoral farm novel’s “dream topography” (Coetzee, 1988:6) of the family farm ruled by the patriarch – a topography inscribed – with the help of the invisible labour of black hands – as a legacy of power and ownership to be inherited and cultivated in perpetuity. Accordingly, the concept “farm” is portrayed as a contested and liminal space inscribed with a history of violence and dispossession – a dystopia. This article therefore conceptualises “Disgrace” as an antipastoral farm novel that reconfigures the concept “farm” – within the context of the South African reality – by subverting, inverting and parodying the structures of space and place postulated by the pastoral farm novel.

Keywords

New Connotations; JM Coetzee; Disgrace 1999; Disgrace As Anti-Pastoral Farm Novel; Farm Novel Tradition; Ideological Underpinnings; Pastoral Prototype; The Inverting And Parodying Of Place And Space

Metrics

Total abstract views: 4685
Total article views: 12547


Crossref Citations

No related citations found.