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Scourging negativity in J.M. Coetzee’s new ‘novel’

by
September 2009, no. 314

Summertime: Scenes from provincial life by J.M. Coetzee

Knopf, $39.95 hb, 266 pp

Book 2 Cover Small (400 x 600)

The Cambridge Introduction to J.M. Coetzee by Dominic Head

Cambridge University Press, $34.95 pb, 130 pp

Scourging negativity in J.M. Coetzee’s new ‘novel’

by
September 2009, no. 314

Over the course of his long and distinguished career, J.M. Coetzee has written fiction in an array of modes and genres. His books include works of historical and epistolary fiction, realism, allegory and metafiction. He has written novels that have developed complex and evocative intertextual relationships with some of his most significant literary influences – Daniel Defoe, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Franz Kafka – and, in his recent writing, he has experimented with prose that is frankly discursive to the point of didacticism, using a fictional framework to problematise and interrogate statements that, given a different context, could be read as straightforward declarations of belief.

James Ley reviews ‘Summertime: Scenes from provincial life’ by J.M. Coetzee and ‘The Cambridge Introduction to J.M. Coetzee’ by Dominic Head

Summertime: Scenes from provincial life

by J.M. Coetzee

Knopf, $39.95 hb, 266 pp

Book 2 Cover Small (400 x 600)

The Cambridge Introduction to J.M. Coetzee

by Dominic Head

Cambridge University Press, $34.95 pb, 130 pp

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