29 Oct 2009
|
£50.00
|
Hardback
In Stock
 
9780230221567
|| 

DescriptionContentsAuthors

Description

Clarkson pays sustained attention to the dynamic interaction between Coetzee's fiction and his critical writing, exploring the Nobel prize-winner's participation in, and contribution to, contemporary literary-philosophical debates. The book sets out by examining Coetzee's preoccupation with language, and opens onto a consideration of the ethical and aesthetic implications of the writer's linguistic choices. What is ethically at stake in the decision to write in the third person, or in playing up the etymologies of words? In what ways do seemingly innocent linguistic decisions have ethical and aesthetic consequences for the position of the speaking or writing self in relation to those whom one addresses, or in relation to those on whose behalf one speaks, or in relation to a world one attempts to represent or create in writing? Questions such as these arise throughout Coetzee's oeuvre, especially in relation to further reflections on notions of the writer's authority and authorial commitments.


Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction
Not I
You
Voice
Voiceless
Names
Etymologies
Conclusion: We
Bibliography
Index


Authors

CARROL CLARKSON has her doctorate from the University of York, UK, and teaches in the English Department at the University of Cape Town, South Africa. She has published in the fields of philosophy of language, jurisprudence, and post-apartheid South African literature and art.







Palgrave Macmillan Ltd
home Palgrave Macmillan Ltd
whitebar
Related Titles