Conference Paper
BibTex RIS Cite
Year 2015, Volume: 1 Issue: 4, 1070 - 1077, 26.12.2015
https://doi.org/10.24289/ijsser.279118

Abstract

References

  • References
  • Ayling, R. (2000). André (Philippus) Brink. In Scanlon, P. A. (ed.), South African Writers. Vol. 225 Detroit: Gale Group. Retrieved from: URL: http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?&id=GALE%7CH1200009384&v=2.1&u=dumlu&it=r&p=LitRC&sw=w
  • Brink, A. (1998). Literature as Cultural Opposition. In: Reinventing a Continent: Writing and Politics in South Africa. (pp. 185-202). Cambridge, Mass.: Zoland Books.
  • ––––––– (June 1980). “Censorship and the Author”. Critical Arts (1) 2, (pp. 16-26).
  • ––––––– (1979). A Dry White Season. London: W. H. Allen.
  • ––––––– (Winter 1996). Reinventing a Continent: Revisiting History in the Litera-ture of the New South Africa: A Personal Testimony. In World Literature To-day (70) 1, (pp. 17-23).
  • ––––––– (July 1999). Interview with André Brink interviewed by Felicity Wood. In: Southern African Journal of English Studies (18) 1, August 2007: (pp. 112-21). Retrieved from: DOI: 10.1080/10131750185310111.
  • ––––––– Articulating the Inarticulate. In Ewald M., Michela B., and Karin O., (eds.), Trauma, Memory, and Narrative in South Africa: Interviews. (pp. 3-18) Am-sterdam: Rodopi:
  • Diala, I. (Winter 2002). The Political Limits of (Western) Humanism in André Brink’s Early Fiction. Studies in the Novel, (34) 4: (pp. 422-447). Retrieved from: DOI: 10.1080/0305707032000135888.
  • ––––––– (December 2003). André Brink and the Implications of Tragedy for Apart-heid South Africa. Journal of Southern African Studies, (29) 4, (pp. 903-919).
  • ––––––– (June 2006). André Brink and Malraux. Contemporary Literature, (47) 1, (pp. 91-113).
  • Jolly, R. J. (1996.) Colonization, Violence, and Narration in White South African Writ-ing: Andre´ Brink, Breyten Breytenbach, and J.M. Coetzee. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press.
  • Karolides, N. J. (2006). Banned Books: Literature Suppressed on Political Grounds. Revised Edition, New York: Facts on File.
  • Kossew, S. (1996). Pen and Power. A Post-Colonial Reading of J.M. Coetzee and Andre Brink. Amsterdam, Atlanta GA: Rodopi.
  • Maynard, K. K., Kearney, J., and Guimond, J. (2010). Revenge versus Legality: Wild Justice from Balzac to Clint Eastwood and Abu Ghraib. Abingdon, Oxon: Birk-beck Law Press.

Torture, violence and apartheid in André P. Brink’s A Dry White Season

Year 2015, Volume: 1 Issue: 4, 1070 - 1077, 26.12.2015
https://doi.org/10.24289/ijsser.279118

Abstract

The preoccupation with skin color and other physical qualities of black men to legitimize colonialism and imperialism were of significance in South African history. The implementation of racism, discrimination, and exploitation in South Africa was unprecedented because apartheid was employed to the majority of blacks systematically and institutionally by the colonizer countries. Apartheid régime, as an official policy of the Afrikaner government between 1948 and 1990, created huge disparity and discriminations between the whites and non-whites. Published in 1979, A Dry White Season is André Brink’s fifth novel and it presents the enigmatic events that happen to Ben Du Toit and other black characters. The novel is the account of subjugation, illegal detentions, and murders of black people under the custody of the security police during and after of the Soweto uprising in South Africa. Setting his novel within the backdrop of the Soweto riots, Brink chooses a nameless narrator to narrate the turbulent events which reflects the brutality of apartheid during the 1970s and 1980s. Contented with his wife and his three children, Ben is killed mysteriously in a hit and run accident. The mysterious death of the protagonist and the events are narrated by a nameless narrator who was Ben’s former university roommate. By disregarding the intimidation and seizures, Ben assumes responsibility to research the illegal detentions and tortures individually. This study explores the issues of torture, state violence, and arbitrary arrests of black peoples during the apartheid years in South Africa.


References

  • References
  • Ayling, R. (2000). André (Philippus) Brink. In Scanlon, P. A. (ed.), South African Writers. Vol. 225 Detroit: Gale Group. Retrieved from: URL: http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?&id=GALE%7CH1200009384&v=2.1&u=dumlu&it=r&p=LitRC&sw=w
  • Brink, A. (1998). Literature as Cultural Opposition. In: Reinventing a Continent: Writing and Politics in South Africa. (pp. 185-202). Cambridge, Mass.: Zoland Books.
  • ––––––– (June 1980). “Censorship and the Author”. Critical Arts (1) 2, (pp. 16-26).
  • ––––––– (1979). A Dry White Season. London: W. H. Allen.
  • ––––––– (Winter 1996). Reinventing a Continent: Revisiting History in the Litera-ture of the New South Africa: A Personal Testimony. In World Literature To-day (70) 1, (pp. 17-23).
  • ––––––– (July 1999). Interview with André Brink interviewed by Felicity Wood. In: Southern African Journal of English Studies (18) 1, August 2007: (pp. 112-21). Retrieved from: DOI: 10.1080/10131750185310111.
  • ––––––– Articulating the Inarticulate. In Ewald M., Michela B., and Karin O., (eds.), Trauma, Memory, and Narrative in South Africa: Interviews. (pp. 3-18) Am-sterdam: Rodopi:
  • Diala, I. (Winter 2002). The Political Limits of (Western) Humanism in André Brink’s Early Fiction. Studies in the Novel, (34) 4: (pp. 422-447). Retrieved from: DOI: 10.1080/0305707032000135888.
  • ––––––– (December 2003). André Brink and the Implications of Tragedy for Apart-heid South Africa. Journal of Southern African Studies, (29) 4, (pp. 903-919).
  • ––––––– (June 2006). André Brink and Malraux. Contemporary Literature, (47) 1, (pp. 91-113).
  • Jolly, R. J. (1996.) Colonization, Violence, and Narration in White South African Writ-ing: Andre´ Brink, Breyten Breytenbach, and J.M. Coetzee. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press.
  • Karolides, N. J. (2006). Banned Books: Literature Suppressed on Political Grounds. Revised Edition, New York: Facts on File.
  • Kossew, S. (1996). Pen and Power. A Post-Colonial Reading of J.M. Coetzee and Andre Brink. Amsterdam, Atlanta GA: Rodopi.
  • Maynard, K. K., Kearney, J., and Guimond, J. (2010). Revenge versus Legality: Wild Justice from Balzac to Clint Eastwood and Abu Ghraib. Abingdon, Oxon: Birk-beck Law Press.
There are 15 citations in total.

Details

Journal Section Makaleler
Authors

Derya Emir This is me

Publication Date December 26, 2015
Published in Issue Year 2015 Volume: 1 Issue: 4

Cite

APA Emir, D. (2015). Torture, violence and apartheid in André P. Brink’s A Dry White Season. International Journal of Social Sciences and Education Research, 1(4), 1070-1077. https://doi.org/10.24289/ijsser.279118
AMA Emir D. Torture, violence and apartheid in André P. Brink’s A Dry White Season. International Journal of Social Sciences and Education Research. December 2015;1(4):1070-1077. doi:10.24289/ijsser.279118
Chicago Emir, Derya. “Torture, Violence and Apartheid in André P. Brink’s A Dry White Season”. International Journal of Social Sciences and Education Research 1, no. 4 (December 2015): 1070-77. https://doi.org/10.24289/ijsser.279118.
EndNote Emir D (December 1, 2015) Torture, violence and apartheid in André P. Brink’s A Dry White Season. International Journal of Social Sciences and Education Research 1 4 1070–1077.
IEEE D. Emir, “Torture, violence and apartheid in André P. Brink’s A Dry White Season”, International Journal of Social Sciences and Education Research, vol. 1, no. 4, pp. 1070–1077, 2015, doi: 10.24289/ijsser.279118.
ISNAD Emir, Derya. “Torture, Violence and Apartheid in André P. Brink’s A Dry White Season”. International Journal of Social Sciences and Education Research 1/4 (December 2015), 1070-1077. https://doi.org/10.24289/ijsser.279118.
JAMA Emir D. Torture, violence and apartheid in André P. Brink’s A Dry White Season. International Journal of Social Sciences and Education Research. 2015;1:1070–1077.
MLA Emir, Derya. “Torture, Violence and Apartheid in André P. Brink’s A Dry White Season”. International Journal of Social Sciences and Education Research, vol. 1, no. 4, 2015, pp. 1070-7, doi:10.24289/ijsser.279118.
Vancouver Emir D. Torture, violence and apartheid in André P. Brink’s A Dry White Season. International Journal of Social Sciences and Education Research. 2015;1(4):1070-7.