Representation of South African Historyin J.M. Coetzee's Dusklands and Disgrace
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Faculty of English
Abstract
This thesis deals with the issues of power, discourse and the construction of
South African 'other' in the dominant rhetoric of the Empire from the perspective of
new historicism. While doing so, it justifies Coetzee's critique of the dominant
historiographyand his concerns for the marginalized and ignored aspects of South
African culture and history and the minorities such as the labourers and the women. In
this connection, this thesis argues that in the selected novelsDusklandsandDisgrace
Coetzee rewrites the colonial history of South Africa from the perspectives of the
South Africans and projects racial reconciliation and forgiveness as essential
conditions not only for the prosperity of post apartheid South Africa, but also as
remedies for the suspicion, doubts and mistrust brought about by apartheid and
looming large among the people.