From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Maxwell Coetzee (English
pronunciation: /kʊtˈsiː/)[1]
(born 9 February 1940) is an author and academic from South Africa. He is
now an Australian citizen and lives
in South
Australia. A novelist and literary critic as well as a
translator, Coetzee has won the Booker Prize twice and
was awarded the 2003 Nobel Prize in
Literature.
Early
life and education
Coetzee was born in Cape
Town, South Africa on 9 February 1940[2] to Afrikaner parents.[3]
His father was an occasional lawyer, government employee and sheep
farmer, and his mother a schoolteacher.[4][5]
The family spoke English at home, but Coetzee spoke Afrikaans with
other relatives.[4]
The family were descended from early Dutch settlers dating to the
17th century.[6]
Coetzee also has Polish roots,
as his great-grandfather Baltazar (or Balcer) Dubiel was a Polish
immigrant to South Africa.[7]
Coetzee spent most of his early life in Cape Town and in Worcester in Cape Province (modern-day Western Cape) as
recounted in his fictionalized memoir, Boyhood (1997). The
family moved to Worcester when Coetzee was eight after his father
lost his government job due to disagreements over the state's apartheid policy.[5]
Coetzee attended St. Joseph's College, a Catholic school in the
Cape Town suburb of Rondebosch,[8]
and later studied mathematics and English at the University of Cape Town,
receiving his Bachelor of Arts with Honours in English in 1960 and
his Bachelor of Arts with Honours in Mathematics in 1961.[9][10]
Coetzee married Philippa Jubber in 1963[11]
and divorced in 1980.[5]
He had a daughter, Gisela (born 1968), and a son, Nicolas (born
1966), from the marriage.[11]
Nicolas was killed in 1989 at the age of 23 in a car accident.[5][11][12][13][14]
Academic and literary
career
Coetzee relocated to the United Kingdom in 1962, where he worked
as a computer programmer, staying until 1965.[4] He
initially worked for IBM in London
before moving to International Computers
Limited in Bracknell, Berkshire.[15]
In 1963, while working in the UK, he was awarded a Master of Arts
degree from the University of Cape Town for a
dissertation on the novels of Ford Madox Ford.[4]
His experiences in England were later recounted in Youth
(2002), his second volume of fictionalized memoirs.
Coetzee went to the University of Texas at
Austin on the Fulbright Program in 1965. He
received a PhD in linguistics there in 1969. His PhD thesis was on
computer stylistic analysis of the
works of Samuel
Beckett.[4] In
1968, he began teaching English and literature at the State
University of New York at Buffalo where he stayed until
1971.[4] It
was at Buffalo that he started his first novel, Dusklands.[4] In
1971, Coetzee sought permanent residence in the United States, but
it was denied due to his involvement in anti-Vietnam-War protests. In March 1970,
Coetzee had been one of 45 faculty members who occupied the
university's Hayes Hall and were subsequently arrested for criminal
trespass.[16]
He then returned to South Africa to teach English literature at the
University of Cape Town. He was promoted to Professor of General
Literature in 1983 and was Distinguished Professor of Literature
between 1999 and 2001.[4]
Upon retiring in 2002, Coetzee relocated to Adelaide, Australia,
where he was made an honorary research fellow at the English
Department of the University of Adelaide,[17]
where his partner, Dorothy Driver,[10]
is a fellow academic.[18]
He served as professor on the Committee on Social Thought
at the University of Chicago until
2003.[19]
In addition to his novels, he has published critical works and
translations from Dutch and Afrikaans.[20]
On 6 March 2006, Coetzee became an Australian citizen.[17]
Personality and
reputation
Coetzee is known as reclusive and eschews publicity to such an
extent that he did not collect either of his two Booker Prizes
in person.[21][22]
Author Rian Malan has
said that:
Coetzee is a man of almost monkish self-discipline and
dedication. He does not drink, smoke or eat meat. He cycles vast
distances to keep fit and spends at least an hour at his
writing-desk each morning, seven days a week. A colleague who has
worked with him for more than a decade claims to have seen him
laugh just once. An acquaintance has attended several dinner
parties where Coetzee has uttered not a single word.
[23]
As a result of his reclusive nature, signed copies of Coetzee's
fiction are very highly sought after.[20]
Recognising this, he was a key figure in the establishment of Oak Tree Press's
First Chapter Series, a series of limited edition signed
works by literary greats to raise money for the child victims and
orphans of the African HIV/AIDS crisis.[24]
In recent years, Coetzee has become a vocal critic of animal
cruelty and advocate for the animal rights movement.[25] In a
speech given on his behalf by Hugo Weaving in Sydney on 22 February
2007, Coetzee railed against the modern animal husbandry
industry.[26] The
speech was for Voiceless, an Australian non-profit animal rights
organization.[27]
Coetzee's fiction has similarly engaged with the problems of animal
cruelty and animal welfare, in particular his novels Disgrace, The Lives of
Animals and Elizabeth Costello. He is vegetarian.[28]
Achievements and awards
Coetzee has gained many awards throughout his career, although
he has a reputation for avoiding award ceremonies.[29]
His novel Waiting for the
Barbarians was awarded the James Tait Black Memorial
Prize and the Geoffrey Faber Memorial
Prize,[30]
and he is three-times winner of the CNA Prize.[31]
Age of Iron
was awarded the Sunday Express
Book of the Year
award,[32]
and The Master of Petersburg
was awarded the Irish Times International Fiction
Prize in 1995.[33]
He has also won the French Prix Femina
Étranger, the Commonwealth Writers'
Prize, and the 1987 Jerusalem Prize for the Freedom of the
Individual in Society.[30][32][34]
He was the first author to be awarded the Booker Prize twice:
first for Life & Times of Michael
K in 1983, and again for Disgrace in 1999.[35]
Only one author has matched this since – Peter
Carey, an Australian. Coetzee was named on the longlist for the
2009 prize for Summertime[36]
and was an early favourite to win.[37][38]
Coetzee subsequently made the shortlist, but lost out to
bookmakers' favourite and eventual winner Hilary Mantel.[39]
Coetzee was also longlisted in 2003 for Elizabeth
Costello and in 2005 for Slow Man.[33]
On 2 October 2003 it was announced that he was to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature,
making him the fourth African writer to be so honoured,[40]
and the second South African after Nadine Gordimer.[41]
When awarding the prize, the Swedish Academy stated that Coetzee
"in innumerable guises portrays the surprising involvement of the
outsider".[42]
The press release for the award also cited his "well-crafted
composition, pregnant dialogue and analytical brilliance," while
focusing on the moral nature of his work.[42]
The prize ceremony was held in Stockholm on 10 December 2003.[41]
Coetzee was awarded the Order of Mapungubwe (gold class) by
the South African government on 27 September 2005 for his
"exceptional contribution in the field of literature and for
putting South Africa on the world stage."[43] He
holds honorary doctorates from the University of Adelaide,[44] La Trobe
University,[45] the
University of Natal,[46]
the University of Oxford,[47] Rhodes
University,[48]
the State University of New York at Buffalo,[32]
the University of Strathclyde[32]
and the University of Technology,
Sydney.[49]
Politics
Political
orientation
Writing about his past in the third
person, Coetzee states in Doubling the Point that:
Politically, the
raznochinets can go either way. But
during his student years he, this person, this subject, my subject,
steers clear of the right. As a child in
Worcester he has seen enough of
the Afrikaner right, enough of its rant, to last him a lifetime. In
fact, even before Worcester he has perhaps seen more of cruelty and
violence than should have been allowed to a child. So as a student
he moves on the fringes of the left without being part of the left.
Sympathetic to the human concerns of the left, he is alienated,
when the crunch comes, by its language – by all political
language, in fact.
[50]
Asked about the latter part of this quote in an interview,
Coetzee said:
There is no longer a left worth speaking of, and a language of
the left. The language of politics, with its new economistic bent,
is even more repellent than it was fifteen years ago.
[51]
Views on
South Africa
Along with André
Brink and Breyten Breytenbach, Coetzee was at
"the forefront of the anti-apartheid movement within Afrikaner
literature and letters".[52]
On accepting the Jerusalem Prize in 1987, Coetzee spoke of the
limitations of art in South African society, whose structures had
resulted in "deformed and stunted relations between human beings"
and "a deformed and stunted inner life". He went on to say that
"South African literature is a literature in bondage. It is a less
than fully human literature. It is exactly the kind of literature
you would expect people to write from prison". He called on the
South African government to abandon its apartheid policy.[34]
Scholar Isidore Diala states that J. M. Coetzee, Nadine Gordimer
and André Brink are "three of South Africa's most distinguished
white writers, all with definite anti-apartheid commitment".[53]
It has been argued that Coetzee's 1999 novel Disgrace
allegorises South Africa's Truth
and Reconciliation Commission.[54]
Asked about his views on the TRC, Coetzee has stated: "In a state
with no official religion, the TRC was somewhat anomalous: a court
of a certain kind based to a large degree on Christian teaching and
on a strand of Christian teaching accepted in their hearts by only
a tiny proportion of the citizenry. Only the future will tell what
the TRC managed to achieve".[51]
Following his Australian citizenship ceremony, Coetzee said that
"I did not so much leave South Africa, a country with which I
retain strong emotional ties, but come to Australia. I came because
from the time of my first visit in 1991, I was attracted by the
free and generous spirit of the people, by the beauty of the land
itself and – when I first saw Adelaide – by the grace of
the city that I now have the honour of calling my home."[17]
When he initially moved to Australia, he had cited the South
African government's lax attitude to crime
in that country as a reason for the move, leading to a spat
with Thabo Mbeki,
who, speaking of Coetzee's novel Disgrace stated that
"South Africa is not only a place of rape".[21]
In 1999, the African National Congress
submission to an investigation into racism in the media by the South African Human
Rights Commission named Disgrace as a novel exploiting
racist stereotypes.[55]
However, when Coetzee won his Nobel Prize, Mbeki congratulated him
"on behalf of the South African nation and indeed the continent of
Africa".[56]
Criticism of anti-terrorism
laws
In 2005, Coetzee criticised contemporary anti-terrorism laws as
resembling those employed by the apartheid regime in South Africa:
"I used to think that the people who created [South Africa's] laws
that effectively suspended the rule of law were moral barbarians.
Now I know they were just pioneers ahead of their time".[57]
The main character in Coetzee's 2007 Diary of a
Bad Year, which has been described as blending "memoir
with fiction, academic criticism with novelistic narration" and
refusing "to recognize the border that has traditionally separated
political theory from fictional
narrative",[58]
shares similar concerns about the policies of John Howard and George W.
Bush.[59]
Bibliography
Fiction
Fictionalised
autobiography / autrebiography
- Boyhood: Scenes from Provincial Life (1997) ISBN
0-14-026566-X
- Youth: Scenes from Provincial Life II (2002) ISBN
0-670-03102-X
- Summertime (2009) ISBN
1-846-55318-0
Non-fiction
- White Writing: On the Culture of Letters in South
Africa (1988) ISBN 0-300-03974-3
- Doubling the Point: Essays and Interviews (1992) ISBN
0-674-21518-4
- Giving Offense: Essays on Censorship (1996), University of Chicago Press
[hence, US spelling "offense"] ISBN 0-226-11176-8
- Stranger Shores: Literary Essays, 1986-1999 (2002)
ISBN 0-142-00137-6
- Inner Workings: Literary Essays, 2000-2005 (2007) ISBN
0-099-50614-9
Translations and
introductions
- A Posthumous Confession by Marcellus Emants (Boston:
Twayne, 1976 & London: Quartet, 1986) Translated by J. M.
Coetzee.
- The Expedition to the Boabab Tree by Wilma
Stockenström (Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball, 1983 & London:
Faber, 1984) Translated by J. M. Coetzee.
- Landscape with Rowers: Poetry from the Netherlands
Translated and Introduced by J. M. Coetzee (2004) ISBN
0-691-12385-3
- Introduction to Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe (Oxford World's Classics) ISBN
0-192-10033-5
- Introduction to Brighton Rock by Graham Greene (Penguin
Classics) ISBN 0-142-43797-2
- Introduction to Dangling Man by Saul Bellow (Penguin
Classics) ISBN 0-143-03987-3
Book
reviews
- Reviews Martha Dow Fehsenfeld and
Lois More Overbeck (eds) (2009). The Letters of Samuel Beckett,
Volume 1: 1929–1940. Cambridge University Press. ISBN
0521867932.
Film and
TV adaptations
See also
References
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egg-dance". Helen Suzman Foundation. http://www.hsf.org.za/resource-centre/focus/issues-31-40/issue-32-fourth-quarter-2003/jm-coetzee-incites-an-anc-egg-dance. Retrieved
2009-08-02.
- ^ "JM Coetzee joins criticism of
Australia terror law plan". The Citizen.
2005-10-24. http://www.citizen.co.za/index/article.aspx?pDesc=9396,1,22. Retrieved
2009-08-02.
- ^ Moses, Michael Valdez (July 2008). "State of discontent: J.M.
Coetzee's anti-political fiction". Reason.
http://www.reason.com/news/show/126870.html. Retrieved
2009-08-02.
- ^ Hope, Deborah (2007-08-25). "Coetzee 'diary' targets
PM". The Australian. http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,22303991-5001986,00.html. Retrieved
2009-08-02.
External
links
| Works by J. M. Coetzee |
|
| Novels |
|
 |
|
| Memoirs |
Boyhood: Scenes from Provincial
Life (1997) · Youth: Scenes from Provincial Life
II (2002) · Summertime (2009)
|
|
| Essay collections |
White Writing: On the Culture of
Letters in South Africa (1988) · Doubling the Point: Essays and
Interviews (1992) · Giving Offense: Essays on
Censorship (1996) · The Lives of Animals
(1999) · Stranger Shores: Literary Essays,
1986–1999 (2001) · Inner Workings: Literary Essays,
2000-2005 (2007)
|
|
| Film adaptations |
|
|
| Persondata |
| NAME |
Coetzee, John Maxwell |
| ALTERNATIVE
NAMES |
|
| SHORT
DESCRIPTION |
Contemporary South African novelist, translator and academic
(now living in Australia), won the 2003 Nobel Prize in
Literature |
| DATE OF BIRTH |
9 February 1940 |
| PLACE OF
BIRTH |
Cape Town, South
Africa |
| DATE OF DEATH |
|
| PLACE OF
DEATH |
|