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Novelist, Memoirist, & Essayist
Benaroya Hall, Sunday, March 3, 2002
Biography
Excerpt
Selected Works
Links
Biography
John Michael Coetzee was born in South Africa in 1940, the son of
an attorney and a school teacher. He grew up outside of Worcester, living
a provincial life. He attended the University of Cape Town where he received
degrees in mathematics and English, and thereafter he moved to London
where he worked as a computer programmer. In 1965 he left London for the
United States, where he studied for a Ph.D. in linguistics at the University
of Texas at Austin. He eventually returned to South Africa in 1971, after
spending three years teaching at the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Living
in the U.S. during the turbulent 1960s inspired the novella The
Vietnam Project, which follows a protagonist who is working on a
propoganda project to destroy the country of Vietnam. This novella appeared
in his first book, Dusklands (1974).
In the books that followed, Coetzee started to set his novels in geographical
and political situations that implied South Africa, as he wanted to create
geographical anonymity and avoid being labeled a political writer.
Indeed, the exposed protagonist in an unspecified landscape is a structure
Coetzee utilizes in most of his fiction. Writing in The New Republic,
Caryl Phillips explained that Coetzees writing never collapses into
"clumsy antinomies" of black and white, left and right, revolutionary
and reactionary, or any other oppositions that threaten to reduce
the complexity of life to easily adhesive slogans. In fact, he addresses
the most sensitive of political issues without asserting a political agenda
of his own.
Coetzee went on to win the Booker Prize twice, for Life & Times
of Michael K and most recently for his 1999 novel, Disgrace.
After the publication of Disgrace, The Sunday Times wrote,
This is a harsh story, told in a prose of spare, steely beauty and
with an intelligent potency that makes it as exhilarating as it is grim.
It is an account of a mans midlife crisis that turns into a starkly
honest and compelling examination of his relationship with his daughter,
contemporary South Africa, and, ultimately, human dignity and love.
Coetzee received the Lannan Literary Award for fiction in 1998. He is
a professor of general literature at the University of Cape Town.
Excerpt
taken from Disgrace (1999)
The two young sheep are tethered all day beside the stable on a bare patch
of ground. Their bleating, steady and monotonous, has begun to annoy him.
He strolls over to Petrus, who has his bicycle upside down and is working
on it. Those sheep, he says dont you think
we could tie them where they can graze?
They are for the party, says Petrus. On
Saturday I will slaughter them for the party. You and Lucy must come.
He wipes his hands clean. I invite you and Lucy to the party.
On Saturday?
Yes, I am giving a party on Saturday. A big party.
Thank you. But even if the sheep are for the party,
dont you think they could graze?
An hour later the sheep are still tethered, still bleating
dolefully. Petrus is nowhere to be seen. Exasperated, he unties them and
tugs them over to the damside, where there is abundant grass.
The sheep drink at length, then leisurely begin to graze.
They are black-faced Persians, alike in size, in markings, even in their
movements. Twins, in all likelihood, destined since birth for the butchers
knife. Well, nothing remarkable in that. When did a sheep last die of
old age? Sheep do not own themselves, do not own their lives. They exist
to be used, every last ounce of them, their flesh to be eaten, their bones
to be crushed and fed to poultry. Nothing escapes, except perhaps the
gall bladder, which no one will eat. Descartes should have thought of
that. The soul, suspended in the dark, bitter gall, hiding.
Petrus has invited us to a party, he tells Lucy.
Why is he throwing a party?
Because of the land transfer, I would guess. It goes
through officially on the first of next month. Its a big day for
him. We should at least put in an appearance, take them a present.
He is going to slaughter the two sheep. I wouldnt
have thought two sheep would go very far.
Petrus is a pennypincher. In the old days it would have
been an ox.
Im not sure I like the way he does things
bringing the slaughter-beasts home to acquaint them with the people who
are going to eat them.
What would you prefer? That the slaughtering be done
in an abattoir, so that you neednt think about it?
Yes.
Wake up, David. This is the country. This is Africa.
Selected
Works
FICTION
Dusklands, 1974.
In the Heart of the Country: A Novel, 1977.
Waiting for the Barbarians, 1980.
Life and Times of Michael K., 1983.
Foe, 1986
Age of Iron, 1990.
The Master of Petersburg, 1994.
Disgrace, 1999
NON-FICTION
White Writing: On the Culture of Letters, 1988.
Doubling the Point : Essays and Interviews, 1992.
Giving Offense: Essays on Censorship, 1996.
Boyhood: Scenes from Provincial Life, 1998.
Web
Site Links
Review
of Disgrace on Salon.com
Article
on Coetzee's 2nd Booker
Featured author on New
York Times web site
Book
reviews written by Coetzee on The New York Review of Books'
web site
Underwritten by University Book Store
Photo: Jerry Bauer
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