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Disgrace by J. M. Coetzee
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Disgrace

by J. M. Coetzee

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
4,80185448 (3.85)182
Info:

Viking Adult (1999), Edition: First Edition, Hardcover, 224 pages

Member:lindsacl
Collections:Prizewinners, African Literature, Your library, Read but unownedRating:***
Tags:booker prize, borrowed, fiction, read in 2009, south african authors, 1001
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English (75)  Dutch (3)  Swedish (1)  German (1)  Spanish (1)  French (1)  Greek (1)  Italian (1)  Norwegian (1)  All languages (85)
Showing 1-5 of 75 (next | show all)
This book is totally sad, depressing and horrible. It is very well written and simple. I liked the book and I do recommend it to those who like this type of book. The hundreds of years of oppression and the seperation of cultures really seems to completely control their world. I am not surprised that there are so many problems now. No one understands what any one is talking about. There is no common bond between races, men and women, or young and old. Now that [Disgrace] is more than a decade old, I wonder if the same problems still exist. I am guessing that though a lot has changed in the 10-12 years, there is much that remains the same. ( )
  jmaloney17 | Jan 27, 2010 |
Story of david laurie middle -aged professor who has an impulsive affair with a student.He is summoned before a committee of inquiry.He is willing to admit his guilt but refuses to yield to pressure to repent publicly so he resigns and retreats to to his daughter's small holding in south africa..There he and Lucy become victim to a savage and disturbing attack including a rape of lucy.He finds it very hard to accept his daughters decison to keep the baby from the rape and to understand her decision to stay on the farm with perhaps a semi-marriage 'arrangement' with Petrus to keep her safe.A thought -provoking at times disturbing book dealing with issues around power and abuse as well as the whole dilemna of south Africa and the power of male desire. ( )
  mary.mchale | Jan 24, 2010 |
Totally uninspiring book, well written but completely forgettable. In fact I read only recently and I cannot rememer the story.
Its won many a prize but not in my world. ( )
  lorraineh | Jan 24, 2010 |
(plot spoiler) I found this a very readable novel. With an engaging plot, it had relevance and was thought provoking. Although very South African - has white man still a place in Africa? - it also deals with whether a 52 year old man can change. The narrator keeps saying he can’t but he does and while he is sacked for a liaison with one of his university students, you get to accept him and empathise such as when he questions whether he is naturally kind or violent, for example - the age old question. It’s difficult to accept his daughter’s refusal to leave her farm after she’s raped by three black men and in danger of being raped again so I didn’t like that part even if was used to bring out the starting with nothing idea as the blacks have done. I didn’t really understand the symbolism of his Byron in Italy opera - the way he focuses on Byron’s mistress in her older age when Byron is dead and his ridicule of her is revealed to her even though he signed his letters to her with intense love. Nor did I understand why the dog he likes and who responds so much to him, he puts down and doesn’t either save for one more week. No doubt it’s symbolic but it doesn’t convince me on its own. Is it resignation? Is he giving up? Does that go with the ending? It’s a book which requires a rereading. ( )
  evening | Jan 10, 2010 |
A fascinating, fast read. A Professor has an affair with a student. Upon being caught, he refuses to answer questions from his inquiry. He refuses to give in to the university's need to censure him. He knows he's wrong but is unwilling to allow the University to drag him through a confession or an acceptance of guilt. I find his crime abhorrent but want to be on his side in wanting to maintain his privacy. He is willing to give up his tenure and his pension for his right to privacy. He of course wins by losing his case. The rest of the novel also has intricacies that make the reader stop and see the many passions and weaknesses of out humanity.
  cbellia | Dec 6, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 75 (next | show all)
The book is written with Coetzee's accustomed steely restraint, and is, like all his work, a masterpiece of understatement. However, there is here what seems a new note of authorial irritation, not only, as might be expected, with the perennial intractability of language and the constraints of the novel form, but with the social changes that are occurring in his country, and in the world at large.
added by rsterling | editNew York Review of Books, John Banville (pay site) (Jan 20, 2000)
 
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For a man of his age, fifty-two, divorced, he has, to his mind, solved the problem of sex rather well.
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Wikipedia in English (2)

Disgrace

J. M. Coetzee

Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0143036378, Paperback)

David Lurie is hardly the hero of his own life, or anyone else's. At 52, the protagonist of Disgrace is at the end of his professional and romantic game, and seems to be deliberately courting disaster. Long a professor of modern languages at Cape Town University College, he has recently been relegated to adjunct professor of communications at the same institution, now pointedly renamed Cape Technical University:
Although he devotes hours of each day to his new discipline, he finds its first premise, as enunciated in the Communications 101 handbook, preposterous: "Human society has created language in order that we may communicate our thoughts, feelings and intentions to each other." His own opinion, which he does not air, is that the origins of speech lie in song, and the origins of song in the need to fill out with sound the overlarge and rather empty human soul.
Twice married and twice divorced, his magnetic looks on the wane, David rather cruelly seduces one of his students, and his conduct unbecoming is soon uncovered. In his eighth novel, J.M. Coetzee might have been content to write a searching academic satire. But in Disgrace he is intent on much more, and his art is as uncompromising as his main character, though infinitely more complex. Refusing to play the public-repentance game, David gets himself fired--a final gesture of contempt. Now, he thinks, he will write something on Byron's last years. Not empty, unread criticism, "prose measured by the yard," but a libretto. To do so, he heads for the Eastern Cape and his daughter's farm. In her mid-20s, Lucy has turned her back on city sophistications: with five hectares, she makes her living by growing flowers and produce and boarding dogs. "Nothing," David thinks, "could be more simple." But nothing, in fact, is more complicated--or, in the new South Africa, more dangerous. Far from being the refuge he has sought, little is safe in Salem. Just as David has settled into his temporary role as farmworker and unenthusiastic animal-shelter volunteer, he and Lucy are attacked by three black men. Unable to protect his daughter, David's disgrace is complete. Hers, however, is far worse.

There is much more to be explored in Coetzee's painful novel, and few consolations. It would be easy to pick up on his title and view Disgrace as a complicated working-out of personal and political shame and responsibility. But the author is concerned with his country's history, brutalities, and betrayals. Coetzee is also intent on what measure of soul and rights we allow animals. After the attack, David takes his role at the shelter more seriously, at last achieving an unlikely home and some measure of love. In Coetzee's recent Princeton lectures, The Lives of Animals, an aging novelist tells her audience that the question that occupies all lab and zoo creatures is, "Where is home, and how do I get there?" David, though still all-powerful compared to those he helps dispose of, is equally trapped, equally lost.

Disgrace is almost willfully plain. Yet it possesses its own lean, heartbreaking lyricism, most of all in its descriptions of unwanted animals. At the start of the novel, David tells his student that poetry either speaks instantly to the reader--"a flash of revelation and a flash of response"--or not at all. Coetzee's book speaks differently, its layers and sadnesses endlessly unfolding. --Kerry Fried

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 11:48:17 -0500)

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