A simple, disturbing read, whose story leapt and staggered through the disintegration of the protagonist's life, from the pomposity and arrogance o... (show more)
Disgrace
Disgrace--set in post--apartheid Cape Town and on a remote farm in the Eastern Cape--is deft, lean, quiet, and brutal. A heartbreaking novel about a man and his daughter, Disgrace is a portrait of the new South Africa that is ultimately about grace and love.
At fifty--two Professor David Lurie is divorced, filled with desire but lacking passion. An affair with one of his students leaves him jobless and friendless, except for his daughter, Lucy, who works her smallholding with her neighbor,... (show more)
Disgrace--set in post--apartheid Cape Town and on a remote farm in the Eastern Cape--is deft, lean, quiet, and brutal. A heartbreaking novel about a man and his daughter, Disgrace is a portrait of the new South Africa that is ultimately about grace and love.
At fifty--two Professor David Lurie is divorced, filled with desire but lacking passion. An affair with one of his students leaves him jobless and friendless, except for his daughter, Lucy, who works her smallholding with her neighbor, Petrus, an African farmer now on the way to a modest prosperity. David's attempts to relate to Lucy, and to a society with new racial complexities, are disrupted by an afternoon of violence that changes him and his daughter in ways he could never have foreseen. In this wry, visceral, yet strangely tender novel, Coetzee once again tells "truths [that] cut to the bone" (The New York Time Book Review).
A finalist for The National Book Critics Circle Awards
Coetzee is the only writer to have been awarded the Booker Prize twice (show less)
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I really didn't get anything out of this book. Its style was very clinical and impersonal and there was nothing about any of the characters that I ... (show more)
I really didn't get anything out of this book. Its style was very clinical and impersonal and there was nothing about any of the characters that I found engaging or emotionally provoking. David Lurie was an odd man with an even odder demeanour and while his argument with his daughter regarding her safety was fair and logical, there was something about the way he conveyed it, and everything else about himself, that really didn't inspire anyone to do anything. And Lucy's way of thinking was just a little too 'lie down and take it' for me. I don't profess to know a huge amount about South Africa or the arpatheid, but have numerous South African friends (they all seem to become accountants - though my hair dresser is also South African), and I honestly don't feel this was a decent portrayal of the people or their way of thinking. I don't know, it just felt like a wandering piece of melancholy and I didn't gain all that much from it. A shame, but oh well. (show less)
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This was, quite simply, a brilliant work. The foil of the protagonist's mistreated, more grittily put raped lover against the rape of his own daughter is brutal and stunning. You cannot "feel" for David, much as his daughter cannot allow herself to feel for her father. It portrays the situation in South Africa as the natural conclusion to the liberties that have been from one human being to another over centuries. It just is. It does not preach to us and give us an easy out - t... (show more)
This was, quite simply, a brilliant work. The foil of the protagonist's mistreated, more grittily put raped lover against the rape of his own daughter is brutal and stunning. You cannot "feel" for David, much as his daughter cannot allow herself to feel for her father. It portrays the situation in South Africa as the natural conclusion to the liberties that have been from one human being to another over centuries. It just is. It does not preach to us and give us an easy out - this is what we can do - there are not answers. a book not abandoned from consciousness quickly. (show less)
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A very interesting book. Post-apartheid South Africa, the late 1990s. David Lurie has not risen above mediocrity by his standards: As a twice-divorced college English professor in Cape Town, he hasn't been prolific, is not popular among the students, and shows abysmal judgment in forcing an affair with a girlish student that costs him his job and his name. Even his regular prostitute is creeped out by his neediness, and his only daughter has chosen an autarkic life on a remote farm, left by h... (show more)
A very interesting book. Post-apartheid South Africa, the late 1990s. David Lurie has not risen above mediocrity by his standards: As a twice-divorced college English professor in Cape Town, he hasn't been prolific, is not popular among the students, and shows abysmal judgment in forcing an affair with a girlish student that costs him his job and his name. Even his regular prostitute is creeped out by his neediness, and his only daughter has chosen an autarkic life on a remote farm, left by her lesbian lover. It is a life he finds hard to relate to when, seemingly without much to lose, he temporarily moves in with her. As he humbly tells his daughter, "After a certain age one is simply no longer appealing, and that's that. One just has to buckle down and live out the rest of one's life. Serve one's time."
In a surrounding that could not be more different from the one he is used to, Lurie's problems are put into a rough perspective, and he learns the hard way that higher education and worldliness are no match for a primitive environment with its own laws and codes of conduct, where deeds of primal evil are done.
While throughout the book Coetzee never asks for sympathy for his protagonist (he anonymously refers to him as "he" except in dialogue), Lurie's evolvement from aloof loser to compassionate character is laid out virtuosically. Economical in both prose and overall volume and almost without the use of flashbacks (though continuously in present-tense), Coetzee manages to convey a cosmos of sorrow and redemption. Gut-wrenching scenes, among them a vicious crime with life-altering consequences, are designed with restraint and concern for the victims' dignity. All the more striking without being in the reader's face, Coetzee plants seeds of symbolism that grow into excrescent moral issues. When speaking of the unspeakable, he offers an explanation but no excuse.
Lurie had escaped the city for the Eastern Cape to resolve his inner conflicts, but is increasingly overwhelmed by the outer reality. But the very nature he is so resenting, the often painful coexistence between man and beast leads him, initially helpless, to unexpected recognition. His cool disdain for some humans turns into affection for stray animals, the last in the food chain. "Curious that a man as selfish as he should be offering himself to the service of dead dogs. [...] He saves the honour of the corpses because there is no one else stupid enough to do it." What seems like a low point for a former professor whose retirement project has been to write an opera, is in fact his ticket to recovery, if not closure. In finding a purpose, Lurie is able to reclaim--and reassess--his worth. (show less)
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Race in Disgrace
* caution... spoiler(?)*
I had to re-read certain passages before understanding that the attackers in the story are black and indeed that Petrus, the neighbor, is black. In my mind, Coetzee intentionally left that fact out of their initial description. Obviously, race is an important aspect of life in contemporary S. Africa, but it is left unstated in the book. Is this because it is unstated in S. African society or, on the otherhand, because it is so much a fact of life, that it doesn't need to be stated.
What impact does race have on other events, and is the matter of race of bigger importance than class differences or religion in the story?
Benjamin Rice about 1 year ago
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