Nadine Gordimer's Burger's Daughter: A Casebook

Front Cover
Judie Newman
Oxford University Press, 2003 - Literary Criticism - 224 pages
South African writer Nadine Gordimer won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1991. Her seventh novel, Burger's Daughter, focuses upon the daughter of a white, communist Afrikaner hero. Based partly on fact, successively banned and unbanned by the South African authorities, the novel has also become something of a test case for feminist critics of Gordimer's writing. This casebook includes an interview with and an essay by Nadine Gordimer on the novel, classic and recent critical essays, an introduction discussing biographical and historical contexts and the literary reception, and a bibliography.
 

Contents

Introduction
3
An Interview with Nadine Gordimer about Burgers Daughter
27
Waiting for Revolution
41
The Subject of Revolution
55
Leaving the Mothers House
81
Race and Sex in Burgers Daughter
99
The Degeneration of the Great South African Lie
117
The Synthesis of Revelation
131
What the Book Is About
149
Still Waiting for the Great Feminist Novel
167
Lighting a Torch in the Heart of Darkness
185
The Politics and Poetics of Burgers Daughter
205
Suggested Reading
221
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About the author (2003)

Judie Newman is Professor of American Studies at the University of Nottingham.

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