Published: 2004-01-01

The Novel in Africa

John Maxwell Coetzee

Abstract

J . M. Coetzee

The Novel in Africa

In Coetzee' s story, Elizabeth Costello, an Australian writer, boards an ocean-liner to entertain its passengers by giving talks about literature. Her fellow-entertainer is Emmanuel Egudu, a Nigerian writer lecturing on "The Novel in Africa". In his talk Egudu emphasises his Africanness, a special African identity. In conversation, the two characters discuss the novel in Africa; Elizabeth opines that what distinguishes the African novel is that it is not written for Africans but for foreigners. That fact imposes both restrictions and obligations on the African writer, which Coetee' s story illustrates and explores. What it also exposes is the naivety involved in drawing precipitous conclusions and offering generalisations based on a person's language, profession and ethnic origins.

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Citation rules

Coetzee, J. M. (2004). The Novel in Africa. Er(r)go. Theory - Literature - Culture, (8). Retrieved from https://trrest.vot.pl/ojsus/index.php/ERRGO/article/view/2324

ER(R)GO nr 8 (1/2004) - postcolonialism and therebouts (guest-edited by Zbigniew Białas)

No. 8 (2004)
Published:


ISSN: 1508-6305
eISSN: 2544-3186
Ikona DOI 10.31261/errgo

Publisher
University of Silesia Press | Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego i Wydawnictwo Naukowe "Śląsk"

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