He defines the other choice, that of rivalry - obviously a position he himself identifies with - as resulting in: a novel that operates in terms of its own procedures and issues in its own conclusions, not one that operates in terms of the procedures... J.M. Coetzee: South Africa and the Politics of Writing - Pagina 15door David Attwell - 1993 - 160 pagina’sGedeeltelijke weergave - Over dit boek
| Sue Kossew - 1996 - 276 pagina’s
...other choice, that of rivalry - obviously a position he himself identifies with - as resulting in: a novel that operates in terms of its own procedures...its own conclusions, not one that operates in terms at the procedures of history and eventuate^ in conclusions that are checkable by history (as a child's... | |
| Bill Ashcroft - 2001 - 177 pagina’s
...options: supplementarity or rivalry. (Attwell, 1990: 586) Coetzee's position is decidedly one of rivalry: 'a novel that operates in terms of its own procedures...that operates in terms of the procedures of history' (1988: 3). Attwell provides a third alternative, that of complementarity, but I think there is a paradoxical... | |
| Eva-Marie Herlitzius - 2005 - 388 pagina’s
...which bring about a multiplicity of meanings and perspectives on historical discourse. As he proposes: [A] novel that operates in terms of its own procedures...own conclusions, not one that operates in terms of procedures of history and eventuates in conclusions that are checkable by history (as a child's schoolbook... | |
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