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40 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Dark, merciless and yet ultimately life affirming., 27 Nov 2001
By A Customer
J. M. Coetzee, a Booker Prize-winning author, has immaculate credentials as a literary author. "Disgrace" portrays the fragile political makeup of South Africa as a country, but this is not the overriding aspect of this story. This is an intense gripping story that addresses a number of important issues - not just political but also social and psychological. Perhaps the older we become, the more we understand human nature and can sympathize with human weaknesses. The characters are complex, existentially struggling human beings, hard to understand, and to warm to, but this is precisely where the novel's strength lies, for the tragic, blundering attempts by the protagonist to be understood by those around him, and his faltering efforts at understanding his daughter provides an allegory for people living together in any society.At fifty-two Professor David Lurie is divorced, having been married twice, he has, in his mind solved the problems of sex rather well, filled with desire but lacking in passion. An affair with one of his students leaves him jobless and friendless. David is still unwilling to admit that sexual fulfilment and passion have passed him by. He believes in romance, as the romantic poets about whom he teaches believe in the wonder of nature. However, as the story unfolds he comes to realise and accept that for him sexual relationships will no longer hold passion or meaning. Before this realisation he has one moment when he feels pure gratitude for all the women in his life. His complacency is short lived, for piece by piece his life begins to crumble around him. As a professor of modern languages, who, under the guise of "the great rationalisation," has now been relegated to adjunct professor. He now teaches Communications 101 at Cape Technical University, formerly Cape Town University College. Post-apartheid South Africa has also gone through a process of rationalisation, and a brittle affair with a student in his romantic poetry class leads to him being fired on sexual harassment charges, and he now seeks refuge at his daughter's house in the country hoping to write a libretto on Byron. Rural South Africa presents David with a harsh and violent reality, forcing him to reassess life as he has lived it. His daughter, Lucy, who works her smallholding with her neighbour, Petrus, an African farmer now on the way to a modest prosperity. Lucy is held by her love for the land. The visit to his daughter Lucy in the veldt throws him into a different world, of barren heat and dust, hardship, dogs, and a simmering antipathy between the white settlers of the land and the black natives who are gradually reasserting themselves... Aptly titled, this is a novel about the carrying of disgrace on a daily, human level, about the way that what happens in one fractured family reflects a greater national whole. I came to sympathise with David, and by the end of the book I felt saddened for him. This book sheds light on a society, whose problems are largely forgotten by the West, but who are still struggling to come to terms with there own history. A truly beautifully written novel.
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