Middlebury

CMLT0451A-F22

Novels by J.M. Coetzee
Please register via ENGL 0451A

The Novels of J.M. Coetzee: Ethics and Empire
Coetzee, whose novels engage questions of institutional racism, state-sponsored violence, patriarchal privilege, environmental degradation, animal rights, and how to ethically approach cultural Others, manages to speak of specific historical circumstances—such as South Africa’s apartheid regime—while simultaneously addressing universal dilemmas of our contemporary human condition. Having received both the Booker (twice) and Nobel Prizes for literature, Coetzee is recognized as the living heir of both Kafka and Beckett, and as a writer whose searing prose and formal experimentation both extend and transform the novel’s traditional role as our culture’s most skeptical self-inquisitor. Depicting every act of writing as either a confrontation or an evasion, Coetzee both reveres and rebukes the literary traditions he warily embraces. We will read his strongest and most globally recognized works, from Waiting for the Barbarians through Disgrace.
Course Reference Number (CRN):
92988
Subject Code:
CMLT
Course Number:
0451
Section Identifier:
A

Course

CMLT 0451

All Sections in Fall 2022

Fall 2022

CMLT0451A-F22 Seminar (Baldridge)