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Emigration, literary celebrity, and the autobiographical turn in J.M. Coetzee's later fiction

Includes bibliographical references.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Powers, Donald
Other Authors: Clarkson, Carrol
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of English Language and Literature 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Powers, Donald
author2 Clarkson, Carrol
author_browse Clarkson, Carrol
Powers, Donald
author_facet Clarkson, Carrol
Powers, Donald
author_sort Powers, Donald
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description Includes bibliographical references.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:13.078Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Department of English Language and Literature
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/14708 Emigration, literary celebrity, and the autobiographical turn in J.M. Coetzee's later fiction Powers, Donald Clarkson, Carrol English Language and Literature Includes bibliographical references. Whereas commentary on autobiography in Coetzee tends to focus on the dynamics of secular confession and the idea of self-writing as 'autre-biography,' this thesis, taking the experience of emigration and literary celebrity as thematic pivots, argues that the protagonists of Coetzee's later fiction (Youth through Summertime) occasion a form of authorial self-disclosure that is not an end in itself but, with a nominal anchorage on Coetzee himself, a means of localising questions about literary genre, political complicity, the relation between author and character, the intersection of personal and collective history, and the social responsibility of the acclaimed writer. It is argued that the slippage of focus from the authorial personas in these fictions to the questions and critical voices they provoke nonetheless conspires to reaffirm the authority of the name and literary oeuvre' Coetzee. 'The thesis begins by examining the link in Youth between the protagonist's crisis of ethnic and literary identity and Coetzee's narrative strategy of subjective displacement (Chapter 1). It is shown that the refractive zone of questions in that fiction constitutes the self-qualifying reflex that becomes increasingly pronounced in the authorial surrogates and fictions that follow. Coetzee's representation of the acclaimed writer as a doubting, fallible, unheroic figure becomes in the case of Elizabeth Costello a rejection of the idea of the writer as a spokesperson for a group or cause and instead an opening for the pressures and responsibilities of living among others to be embodied and negotiated (Chapter 2). It is argued that Coetzee's Nobel Lecture provides a further example of this reserve about the reach of the writer's authority in the public realm: the deferral of authority in this text highlights by indirection an inconsistency in the Swedish Academy's invitation to Coetzee to speak for his work on the occasion of an award that celebrates its universal interpretability, its resistance to authorial meta-interpretation (Chapter 3). It is shown that in Slow Man, where the familiar metafictional interplay between the one who writes and the one who is written is framed on an emigrant history that is implicitly Coetzee's, the characters' contest of interpretation over photographs highlights the instability of the historical record - a point that holds for the text of Coetzee's personal history (Chapter 4). Emphasis on the nominal alignment of the author Coetzee and his authorial surrogate in Diary of a Bad Year governs a consideration of how the author's name- his proper name and reputation - focuses the condition of complicity with others as a reader and citizen; the question of whether the character JC speaks for Coetzee is revealed to be secondary to what it means to be held accountable for actions committed in the name of a group to which one belongs or set of interests to which one subscribes (Chapter 5). The thesis tracks the qualified textualisation of Coetzee 's authorial personas and history to Summertime, where' John Coetzee' is written out of an entanglement of acts of emigration and recollection in voices inflected with other histories than his own (Chapter 6). 2015-11-08T04:47:28Z 2015-11-08T04:47:28Z 2011 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14708 eng application/pdf Department of English Language and Literature Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle English Language and Literature
Powers, Donald
Emigration, literary celebrity, and the autobiographical turn in J.M. Coetzee's later fiction
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Emigration, literary celebrity, and the autobiographical turn in J.M. Coetzee's later fiction
title_full Emigration, literary celebrity, and the autobiographical turn in J.M. Coetzee's later fiction
title_fullStr Emigration, literary celebrity, and the autobiographical turn in J.M. Coetzee's later fiction
title_full_unstemmed Emigration, literary celebrity, and the autobiographical turn in J.M. Coetzee's later fiction
title_short Emigration, literary celebrity, and the autobiographical turn in J.M. Coetzee's later fiction
title_sort emigration literary celebrity and the autobiographical turn in j m coetzee s later fiction
topic English Language and Literature
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14708
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