Book contents
- The Cambridge Companion to J. M. Coetzee
- The Cambridge Companion to J. M. Coetzee
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Forms
- 1 Composition and Craft: Waiting for the Barbarians, Life & Times of Michael K
- 2 Scenes and Settings: Foe, Boyhood, Youth, Slow Man
- 3 Stories and Narration: In the Heart of the Country, The Master of Petersburg, The Childhood of Jesus
- 4 Styles: Dusklands, Age of Iron, Disgrace, The Schooldays of Jesus
- 5 Genres: Elizabeth Costello, Diary of a Bad Year, Summertime
- Part II Relations
- Part III Mediations
- Further Reading
- Index
- Series page
4 - Styles: Dusklands, Age of Iron, Disgrace, The Schooldays of Jesus
from Part I - Forms
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 April 2020
- The Cambridge Companion to J. M. Coetzee
- The Cambridge Companion to J. M. Coetzee
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Chronology
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Forms
- 1 Composition and Craft: Waiting for the Barbarians, Life & Times of Michael K
- 2 Scenes and Settings: Foe, Boyhood, Youth, Slow Man
- 3 Stories and Narration: In the Heart of the Country, The Master of Petersburg, The Childhood of Jesus
- 4 Styles: Dusklands, Age of Iron, Disgrace, The Schooldays of Jesus
- 5 Genres: Elizabeth Costello, Diary of a Bad Year, Summertime
- Part II Relations
- Part III Mediations
- Further Reading
- Index
- Series page
Summary
This chapter examines Coetzee’s creative and scholarly engagements with literary style, beginning with his earliest novel Dusklands and moving across his corpus to track his complexly evolving use of style’s emotional, ethical, and political affordances. Apparently distinct, even diverging impulses – one embracing grace and euphony, the other committing to verbal thrift and minimalism – coalesce across Coetzee’s career, soliciting complicated affective responses from his readers to the inflections and connotations of novelistic discourse. It is critically tempting see Coetzee as a kind of stern gatekeeper of formal restraint: a writer who shuns the consolations of style and who forestalls the pleasures his readers might take in elegantly wrought language, by investing instead in a kind of syntactic austerity and bareness. In practice, however, his fiction doesn’t always behave in this manner, as beautifully paced, rhetorically supple sequences from Age of Iron, Disgrace, and The Schooldays of Jesus attest.
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- The Cambridge Companion to J. M. Coetzee , pp. 64 - 83Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020