Nadine Gordimer (20 November 1923 – 13 July 2014) was a South African writer and political activist. She received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1991, recognised as a writer "who through her magnificent epic writing has ... been of very great benefit to humanity".[1]

Nadine Gordimer
Gordimer at the Gothenburg Book Fair, 2010
Gordimer at the Gothenburg Book Fair, 2010
Born(1923-11-20)20 November 1923
Springs, Transvaal, Union of South Africa
Died13 July 2014(2014-07-13) (aged 90)
Johannesburg, South Africa
OccupationWriter
LanguageEnglish
PeriodApartheid-era South Africa
Genre
  • Novels
  • dramatic plays
Notable works
Notable awards
SpouseGerald Gavron (1949–1952)
Reinhold Cassirer (1954–2001)
Children2

Gordimer was one of the most honored female writers of her generation. She received the Booker Prize for The Conservationist, and the Central News Agency Literary Award for The Conservationist, Burger's Daughter and July's People.

Gordimer's writing dealt with moral and racial issues, particularly apartheid in South Africa. Under that regime, works such as Burger's Daughter were banned. She was active in the anti-apartheid movement, joining the African National Congress during the days when the organisation was banned, and gave Nelson Mandela advice on his famous 1964 defence speech at the trial which led to his conviction for life. She was also active in HIV/AIDS causes.

Early life

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Gordimer was born to Jewish parents near Springs, an East Rand mining town outside Johannesburg. She was the second daughter of Isidore Gordimer (1887–1962), a Lithuanian Jewish immigrant watchmaker from Žagarė in Lithuania (then part of the Russian Empire),[2][3] and Hannah "Nan" (née Myers) Gordimer (1897–1973), a British Jewish immigrant from London.[4][5] Her father was raised with an Orthodox Jewish education before immigrating with his family to South Africa at the age of 13.[6] Her mother was from an established family and came to South Africa at the age of 6 with her parents.[6] Gordimer was raised in a secular household.[2][7] Her mother was not religiously observant, and mostly assimilated, whereas her father maintained a membership of the local Orthodox synagogue and attended once a year for the Yom Kippur services.[8]

Family background

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Gordimer's early interest in racial and economic inequality in South Africa was shaped in part by her parents. Her father's experience as a refugee from Tsarist Russia helped form Gordimer's political identity, but he was neither an activist nor particularly sympathetic toward the experiences of black people under apartheid.[9] Conversely, Gordimer saw activism by her mother, whose concern about the poverty and discrimination faced by black people in South Africa led her to found a crèche for black children.[5] Gordimer also witnessed government repression first-hand as a teenager; the police raided her family home, confiscating letters and diaries from a servant's room.[5]

Gordimer was educated at a Catholic convent school, but was largely home-bound as a child because her mother, for "strange reasons of her own", did not put her into school (apparently, she feared that Gordimer had a weak heart).[9] Home-bound and often isolated, she began writing at an early age, and published her first stories in 1937 at the age of 13.[10] Her first published work was a short story for children, "The Quest for Seen Gold", which appeared in the Children's Sunday Express in 1937; "Come Again Tomorrow", another children's story, appeared in Forum around the same time. At the age of 16, she had her first adult fiction published.[11]

Career

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Gordimer studied for a year at the University of the Witwatersrand, where she mixed for the first time with fellow professionals across the colour bar. She also became involved in the Sophiatown renaissance.[11] She did not complete her degree, but moved to Johannesburg in 1948, where she lived thereafter. While taking classes in Johannesburg, she continued to write, publishing mostly in local South African magazines. She collected many of these early stories in Face to Face, published in 1949.

In 1951, the New Yorker accepted Gordimer's story "A Watcher of the Dead",[12] beginning a long relationship, and bringing Gordimer's work to a much larger public. Gordimer, who said she believed the short story was the literary form for our age,[10] continued to publish short stories in the New Yorker and other prominent literary journals. Her first publisher, Lulu Friedman, was the wife of the Parliamentarian Bernard Friedman, and it was at their house, "Tall Trees" in First Avenue, Lower Houghton, Johannesburg, that Gordimer met other anti-apartheid writers.[13] Gordimer's first novel, The Lying Days, was published in 1953.

Activism and professional life

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The arrest of her best friend, Bettie du Toit,[14] in 1960 and the Sharpeville massacre spurred Gordimer's entry into the anti-apartheid movement.[5] Thereafter, she quickly became active in South African politics, and was close friends with Nelson Mandela's defence attorneys (Bram Fischer and George Bizos) during his 1962 trial.[5] She also helped Mandela edit his famous speech "I Am Prepared to Die", given from the defendant's dock at the trial.[15] When Mandela was released from prison in 1990, she was one of the first people he wanted to see.[5]

During the 1960s and 1970s, she continued to live in Johannesburg, although she occasionally left for short periods of time to teach at several universities in the United States. She had begun to achieve international literary recognition, receiving her first major literary award, the W. H. Smith Commonwealth Literary Award, in 1961. Throughout this time, Gordimer continued to demand through both her writing and her activism that South Africa re-examine and replace its long-held policy of apartheid.[16] In 1973, she was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature by Artur Lundkvist of the Swedish Academy's Nobel committee.[17]

During this time, the South African government banned several of her works, two for lengthy periods of time. The Late Bourgeois World was Gordimer's first personal experience with censorship; it was banned in 1976 for a decade by the South African government.[18][19] A World of Strangers was banned for twelve years.[18] Other works were censored for lesser amounts of time. Burger's Daughter, published in June 1979, was banned one month later. The Publications Committee's Appeal Board reversed the censorship of Burger's Daughter three months later, determining that the book was too one-sided to be subversive.[20] Gordimer responded to this decision in Essential Gesture (1988), pointing out that the board banned two books by black authors at the same time it unbanned her own work.[21] Gordimer's subsequent novels escaped censorship under apartheid.[22] In 2001, a provincial education department temporarily removed July's People from the school reading list, along with works by other anti-apartheid writers,[23][24] describing July's People as "deeply racist, superior and patronising"[25]—a characterisation that Gordimer took as a grave insult, and that many literary and political figures protested.[24]

In South Africa, she joined the African National Congress when it was still listed as an illegal organisation by the South African government.[5][26] While never blindly loyal to any organisation, Gordimer saw the ANC as the best hope for reversing South Africa's treatment of black citizens. Rather than simply criticising the organisation for its perceived flaws, she advocated joining it to address them.[5] She hid ANC leaders in her own home to aid their escape from arrest by the government, and she said that the proudest day of her life was when she testified at the 1986 Delmas Treason Trial on behalf of 22 South African anti-apartheid activists.[5][26] (See Simon Nkoli, Mosiuoa Lekota, etc.) Throughout these years she also regularly took part in anti-apartheid demonstrations in South Africa, and traveled internationally speaking out against South African apartheid and discrimination and political repression.[5]

Her works began achieving literary recognition early in her career, with her first international recognition in 1961, followed by numerous literary awards throughout the ensuing decades. Literary recognition for her accomplishments culminated with the Nobel Prize for Literature on 3 October 1991,[27] which noted that Gordimer "through her magnificent epic writing has—in the words of Alfred Nobel—been of very great benefit to humanity".[1]

Gordimer's activism was not limited to the struggle against apartheid. She resisted censorship and state control of information, and fostered the literary arts. She refused to let her work be aired by the South African Broadcasting Corporation because it was controlled by the apartheid government.[28] Gordimer also served on the steering committee of South Africa's Anti-Censorship Action Group. A founding member of the Congress of South African Writers, Gordimer was also active in South African letters and international literary organisations. She was Vice President of International PEN.[29]

In the post-apartheid 1990s and 21st century, Gordimer was active in the HIV/AIDS movement, addressing a significant public health crisis in South Africa. In 2004, she organised about 20 major writers to contribute short fiction for Telling Tales, a fundraising book for South Africa's Treatment Action Campaign, which lobbies for government funding for HIV/AIDS prevention and care.[30] On this matter, she was critical of the South African government, noting in 2004 that she approved of everything President Thabo Mbeki had done except his stance on AIDS.[30][31][32]

In 2005, Gordimer went on lecture tours and spoke on matters of foreign policy and discrimination beyond South Africa. For instance, in 2005, when Fidel Castro fell ill, Gordimer joined six other Nobel prize winners in a public letter to the United States warning it not to seek to destabilise Cuba's communist government. Gordimer's resistance to discrimination extended to her even refusing to accept "shortlisting" in 1998 for the Orange Prize, because the award recognizes only women writers. Gordimer also taught at the Massey College of the University of Toronto as a lecturer in 2006.[33]

She was a vocal critic of the ANC government's Protection of State Information Bill, publishing a lengthy condemnation in The New York Review of Books in 2012.[34]

Personal life

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Gordimer had a daughter, Oriane (born 1950), by her first marriage in 1949 to Gerald Gavron (Gavronsky), a local dentist, from whom she was divorced within three years.[18] In 1954, she married Reinhold Cassirer, a highly respected art dealer from the well-known German-Jewish Cassirer family. Cassirer established the South African Sotheby's and later ran his own gallery; their "wonderful marriage"[9] lasted until his death from emphysema in 2001. Their son, Hugo, was born in 1955, and is a filmmaker in New York, with whom Gordimer collaborated on at least two documentaries. Gordimer's daughter, Oriane Gavronsky, has two children and lives in the South of France.[35] Gordimer also spent time with her family in France, as she and Cassirer had bought a small hilltop home near Nice.[36]

In a 1979–80 interview Gordimer, who was Jewish, identified herself as an atheist, but added: "I think I have a basically religious temperament, perhaps even a profoundly religious one."[37] She was not involved in Jewish communal life, though both her husbands were Jewish.[38] In a 1996 interview she said: "The only time I seriously enquired into religion was in my mid-thirties, when I experienced a strange kind of loss or lack in myself and thought this may be because I had no religion."[6] She read Teilhard de Chardin, Simone Weil and books about world religions, continuing: "For the first time in my life I learned something about Judaism, the religion of my parents. But it didn't happen. I could not take the leap of faith."[6] She did, however, feel that her moral values emerged from the Judeo-Christian tradition.[6]

She did not feel that being from an oppressed people was the reason that she was engaged in the anti-apartheid struggle: "I get rather annoyed when people suggest that my engagement in the anti-apartheid struggle can somehow be traced back to my Jewishness... I refuse to accept that one must oneself have been exposed to prejudice and exploitation to be opposed to it. I like to think that all decent people, whatever their religious or ethnic background, have an equal responsibility to fight what is evil. To say otherwise is to concede too much."[6]

In 2008, Gordimer defended her decision to attend a Jerusalem Writers Conference in Israel.[39] Gordimer could be critical of Israel, but rejected comparison of its policies to apartheid in South Africa.[40]

Until the end of her life, she lived in the same home in Parktown in Johannesburg for over five decades.[41][42] In 2006, Gordimer was attacked in her home by robbers, sparking outrage in the country. Gordimer apparently refused to move into a gated complex, against the advice of some friends.[43][44] Although her children and grandchildren lived overseas and friends had emigrated, she had no plans to leave South Africa permanently: "It's always been a nightmare in my mind, to be cut off."[36]

Unauthorised biography

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Ronald Suresh Roberts published a biography of Gordimer, No Cold Kitchen, in 2006. She had granted Roberts interviews and access to her personal papers, with an understanding that she would authorise the biography in return for a right to review the manuscript before publication. However, Gordimer and Roberts failed to reach an agreement over his account of the illness and death of Gordimer's husband Reinhold Cassirer and an affair Gordimer had in the 1950s, as well as criticism of her views on the Israel–Palestine conflict. Gordimer disowned the book, accusing Roberts of breach of trust. Publishers Bloomsbury Publishing in London and Farrar, Straus and Giroux in New York subsequently withdrew from the project.[45] Suresh subsequently criticised Gordimer for her decision and her stances on other issues.[45]

Death

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Gordimer died in her sleep at her Johannesburg home on 13 July 2014 at the age of 90.[46][47][48]

Works, themes, and reception

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Gordimer achieved lasting international recognition for her works, most of which deal with political issues, as well as the "moral and psychological tensions of her racially divided home country."[49] Virtually all of Gordimer's works deal with themes of love and politics, particularly concerning race in South Africa. Always questioning power relations and truth, Gordimer tells stories of ordinary people, revealing moral ambiguities and choices. Her characterisation is nuanced, revealed more through the choices her characters make than through their claimed identities and beliefs. She also weaves in subtle details within the characters' names.[citation needed]

Overview of critical works

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Her first published novel, The Lying Days (1953), takes place in Gordimer's home town of Springs, Transvaal, an East Rand mining town near Johannesburg. Arguably a semi-autobiographical work, The Lying Days is a Bildungsroman, charting the growing political awareness of a young white woman, Helen, toward small-town life and South African racial division.[50]

In her 1963 work, Occasion for Loving, Gordimer puts apartheid and love squarely together. Her protagonist, Ann Davis, is married to Boaz Davis, an ethnomusicologist, but in love with Gideon Shibalo, an artist with several failed relationships. Davis is white, however, and Shibalo is black, and South Africa's government criminalised such relationships.[citation needed]

Gordimer collected the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for A Guest of Honour in 1971 and, in common with a number of winners of this award, she was to go on to win the Booker Prize. The Booker was awarded to Gordimer for her 1974 novel, The Conservationist, and was a co-winner with Stanley Middleton's novel Holiday. The Conservationist explores Zulu culture and the world of a wealthy white industrialist through the eyes of Mehring, the antihero. Per Wästberg described The Conservationist as Gordimer's "densest and most poetical novel".[5] Thematically covering the same ground as Olive Schreiner's The Story of an African Farm (1883) and J. M. Coetzee's In the Heart of the Country (1977), the "conservationist" seeks to conserve nature to preserve the apartheid system, keeping change at bay. When an unidentified corpse is found on his farm, Mehring does the "right thing" by providing it a proper burial; but the dead person haunts the work, a reminder of the bodies on which Mehring's vision would be built.[citation needed]

Gordimer's 1979 novel Burger's Daughter is the story of a woman analysing her relationship with her father, a martyr to the anti-apartheid movement. The child of two Communist and anti-apartheid revolutionaries, Rosa Burger finds herself drawn into political activism as well. Written in the aftermath of the 1976 Soweto uprising, the novel was shortly thereafter banned by the South African government. Gordimer described the novel as a "coded homage" to Bram Fischer, the lawyer who defended Nelson Mandela and other anti-apartheid activists.[5][51]

In July's People (1981), she imagines a bloody South African revolution, in which white people are hunted and murdered after blacks revolt against the apartheid government. The work follows Maureen and Bamford Smales, an educated white couple, hiding for their lives with July, their long-time former servant. The novel plays off the various groups of "July's people": his family and his village, as well as the Smales. The story examines how people cope with the terrible choices forced on them by violence, race hatred, and the state.[52]

The House Gun (1998) was Gordimer's second post-apartheid novel. It follows the story of a couple, Claudia and Harald Lingard, dealing with their son Duncan's murder of one of his housemates. The novel treats the rising crime rate in South Africa and the guns that virtually all households have, as well as the legacy of South African apartheid and the couple's concerns about their son's lawyer, who is black. The novel was optioned for film rights to Granada Productions.[53][54][55]

Gordimer's award-winning 2002 novel, The Pickup, considers the issues of displacement, alienation, and immigration; class and economic power; religious faith; and the ability for people to see, and love, across these divides. It tells the story of a couple: Julie Summers, a white woman from a financially secure family, and Abdu, an illegal Arab immigrant in South Africa. After Abdu's visa is refused, the couple returns to his homeland, where she is the alien. Her experiences and growth as an alien in another culture form the heart of the work.[56][57][58][59]

Get a Life, written in 2005 after the death of her long-time spouse, Reinhold Cassirer, is the story of a man undergoing treatment for a life-threatening disease. While clearly drawn from personal life experiences, the novel also continues Gordimer's exploration of political themes. The protagonist is an ecologist, battling installation of a planned nuclear plant. But he is at the same time undergoing radiation therapy for his cancer, causing him personal grief and, ironically, rendering him a nuclear health hazard in his own home. Here, Gordimer again pursues the questions of how to integrate everyday life and political activism.[26] New York Times critic J. R. Ramakrishnan, who noted a similarity with author Mia Alvar, wrote that Gordimer wrote about "long-suffering spouses and (the) familial enablers of political men" in her fiction.[60]

Jewish themes and characters

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Gordimer has occasionally given voice to Jewish characters, rituals and themes in her short stories and novels.

Kenneth Bonert, writing in The Forward, expressed the view that Jewish identity was rarely explored in her work: "For all of her Jewish heritage and personal connections (not only were her parents and family Jews, so were both of her husbands), overt signs of Jewishness are largely absent from her body of work. It's impossible to guess from the books alone that Gordimer was Jewish; and it would be easy to assume the contrary, since whenever Jews do appear in her fiction, they tend to be seen through the eyes of a non-Jew, looking in with almost anthropological fascination onto an alien culture."[61]

In The Later Fiction by Nadine Gordimer (Palgrave Macmillan, 1993), edited by Bryce King, Michael Wade fostered a discussion on Jewish identity as a repressed theme in Gordimer's novel, A Sport of Nature (1987): "Any exploration of the Jewish theme in Nadine Gordimer's writing, especially her novels, in an exploration of the absent, the unwritten, the repressed." Wade noted parallels between Gordimer's white, Jewish social milieu with those of Jewish writers living in urban areas on America's east coast: "Jewishness functioning as a mysterious but ineluctable cultural component of individual identity and expressed as an aspect of the nominally Jewish writer's particular, unique quest for identity in a heterogeneous society".[62]

Benjamin Ivry, writing in The Forward, highlighted several examples where Gordimer employed Jewish characters and themes: "Gordimer proved that indeed anything was possible when examining the personal significance of Yiddishkeit."[63]

In 1951, she wrote "A Watcher of the Dead" for The New Yorker.[64] It centres on the death of a Jewish grandmother and her family observing the ritual of Shemira, as they arrange for a shomer to watch over the body from the time of death until burial.[64] The story later appeared in The Soft Voice of the Serpent the following year.

In the same collection, Gordimer's story, "The Defeated" appeared. It follows the narrator's friendship with a young Jewish immigrant, Miriam Saiyetowitz. Miriam's parents operate a Concession store among the mine compound stores. They later study together at university to become teachers, and Miriam marries a doctor. The narrator visits Miriam's parents on an impulse at their store, they feel abandoned by Miriam, who rarely visits from Johannesburg with their grandson. The narrator explained "I stood there in Miriam's guilt before the Saiyetovitzes, and they were silent, in the accusation of the humble." For Wade: "Miriam's punishment of her parents for their otherness is severe and complete, and conceals Gordimer's own desire to avenge her sense of displacement on her parents for their otherness."[65]

In her debut novel The Lying Days (1953), a major character, Joel Aaron, son of a working class Jewish shopkeeper, acts as a voice of conscience. He has progressive, enlightened views about apartheid. His ethical stances and sense of Jewish identity and ancestry impresses his non-Jewish white middle-class friend, Helen: "His nature had for mine the peculiar charm of the courage to be itself without defiance."[63] Joel is known for his intelligence and integrity. In contrast to Miriam in "The Defeated", Aaron effortlessly accepts his parents and their background.[66] He is a Zionist and makes aliyah to Israel.[67]

In A World of Strangers (1958), there is less Jewish character development, with only a reference to an older man at a party with a thick Eastern European accent with an attractive blonde spouse.[68] In Occasion for Loving (1963), a Jewish character, Boaz Davis appears, but for Wade: "the only Jewish thing is his name".[68]

For Wade, Gordimer saw her father as the most emblematic symbol of Jewishness in her household: "she was compelled to make him both the sign of Jewishness and the object of her rejection." The Jewish otherness is also attributed to the patriarch in "Harry's Presence", a 1960 short story by Gordimer. It is notable as Gordimer's only treatment of the Jewish immigrant experience that does not include or mention black characters.[68]

In 1966, Gordimer wrote an original story for The Jewish Chronicle. "The Visit" includes an extract from the Talmud and follows David Levy returning home from a Friday night Shabbat service.[38] In the same year she published "A Third Presence" for The London Magazine.[69] The story follows two Jewish sisters, Rose and Naomi Rasovsky. According to Wade: "The story's ending indicates that Gordimer has not yet broken through the wool-and-iron barriers of confusion and conflict aroused by the question of her Jewish identity."[70]

In 1983, she published "Letter from His Father" in The London Review of Books, a response to Franz Kafka's "Letter to His Father". In the letter, Gordimer makes references to Yiddish, Yom Kippur, Aliyah, Kibbutzim and Yiddish theatre.[71][63]

Hillela, a Jewish South African woman, figures as the protagonist of A Sport of Nature, (1987).[63] Wade concluded: "By writing A Sport of Nature in the transcendent style she chose, she tried again to give meaning to her personal muddle over Jewish identity and experience, this time by creating Hillela, whose name represents the deepest moral and prophetic tradition in Jewish history, and who, united with Reuel (=Jethro), the great (not-Jewish) guide and adviser of the beginnings of that history, is able to resolve the inherent contradictions of (the writer's?) white-South-African-radical-Jewish identity. But Hillela is perhaps the most striking example in all Gordimer's writing of 'the Jew that went away', and it is not clear that she succeeds in creating the new sign she seems to have sought."[72]

In the short story "My Father Leaves Home", that appears in Jump: And Other Stories (1991), Gordimer describes an Eastern European shtetl, presumably the hometown of the title character. The anti-semitism the character faced in Europe makes him more sensitive to racism against black people in South Africa.[63]

In Gordimer's final novel No Time Like the Present (2012), one of the central characters, Stephen, is half-Jewish and married to a Zulu woman. His nephew's Bar Mitzvah prompts a meditation on his own Jewish background and he fails to grasp his brother's embrace of Judaism.[61]

Nobel Prize in Literature

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Gordimer was nominated for Nobel Prize in Literature in 1972 and 1973 by Swedish Academy member Artur Lundkvist.[73]

Honours and awards

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Tribute

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On 20 November 2015, Google celebrated her 92nd birthday with a Google Doodle.[93]

Bibliography

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Novels

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Plays

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Short fiction

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Collections

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Essays, reporting and other contributions

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  • The Black Interpreters (1973)
  • What Happened to Burger's Daughter or How South African Censorship Works (1980)
  • The Essential Gesture: Writing, Politics and Places (1988)
  • Writing and Being: The Charles Eliot Norton Lectures (1995)
  • Living in Hope and History (1999)
  • Telling Times: Writing and Living, 1950–2008 (2010)
  • Gordimer, Nadine (16 December 2013). "Nelson Mandela". The Talk of the Town. Postscript. The New Yorker. Vol. 89, no. 41. pp. 24, 26.

Edited works

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Other

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  • The Gordimer Stories (1981–82) – adaptations of seven short stories; she wrote screenplays for four of them
  • On the Mines (1973)
  • Lifetimes Under Apartheid (1986)
  • Choosing for Justice: Allan Boesak (1983) (documentary with Hugo Cassirer)
  • Berlin and Johannesburg: The Wall and the Colour Bar (documentary with Hugo Cassirer)

Source:[96]

Reviews

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Girdwood, Alison (1984), Gordimer's South Africa, a review of Something Out There, in Parker, Geoff (ed.), Cencrastus No. 18, Autumn 1984, p. 50, ISSN 0264-0856

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "The Nobel Prize in Literature 1991". Nobelprize. 7 October 2010. Retrieved 7 October 2010.
  2. ^ a b Ettin, Andrew Vogel (1993). Betrayals of the Body Politic: The Literary Commitments of Nadine Gordimer. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. pp. 29–30. ISBN 978-0-8139-1430-5. although she had always referred to her father as Lithuanian, in recent years she has noted that his parents lived and worked in Riga, and now she identifies him as Latvian.
  3. ^ Newman, Judie, ed. (2003). Nadine Gordimer's 'Burger's daughter': A Casebook. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-19-514717-9. She believed for many years that he was Lithuanian (like many South African Jewish immigrants) and only discovered later in life that he was Latvian.
  4. ^ Gordimer, Nadine (1990). Bazin, Nancy Topping; Seymour, Marilyn Dallman (eds.). Conversations with Nadine Gordimer. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. p. xix. ISBN 978-0-87805-445-9. 1923 – Born, 20 November in Springs, a small mining town in the Transvaal, South Africa. Second daughter of Isidore Gordimer, Jewish watchmaker and jeweler who had emigrated from Latvia at age 13, and Nan Myers Gordimer, a native of England.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Wästberg, Per (26 April 2001). "Nadine Gordimer and the South African Experience". Nobelprize.org. Retrieved 16 August 2010.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Gordimer, Nadine & Villa-Vicencio, Charles (October 1996) [1st pub. 1996]. "Nadine Gordimer: A Vocation to Write". In Villa-Vicencio, Charles (ed.). The Spirit of Freedom South African Leaders on Religion and Politics. University of California Press. pp. 104–113. ISBN 9780520200456.
  7. ^ "Heroes – Trailblazers of the Jewish People". Beit Hatfutsot. Archived from the original on 2 January 2020. Retrieved 14 November 2019.
  8. ^ Gordimer, Nadine.A South African Childhood The New Yorker. 8 October 1954
  9. ^ a b c "A Writer's Life: Nadine Gordimer", Telegraph, 3 April 2006.
  10. ^ a b Nadine Gordimer, Guardian Unlimited (last visited 25 January 2007).
  11. ^ a b Nadine Gordimer: A Sport of Nature[permanent dead link], The Anisfield-Wolf Book Awards.
  12. ^ New Yorker, 9 June 1951.
  13. ^ "A mixture of ice and fulfilled desire". Mail & Guardian. 14 November 2005. Retrieved 16 August 2010.
  14. ^ "Nadine Gordimer Biography and Interview". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
  15. ^ Glen Frankel (5 December 2013). "The Speech at Rivonia Trial that Changed History". Washington Post.
  16. ^ Wästberg, Per (26 April 2001). "Nadine Gordimer and the South African Experience". NobelPrize.org. Retrieved 3 March 2024.
  17. ^ "Nobelarkivet-1973" (PDF). svenskaakademien.se. 2 January 2024. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  18. ^ a b c Jonathan Steele, "White magic", The Guardian (London), 27 October 2001.
  19. ^ Gail Caldwell, "South African Writer Given Nobel", The Boston Globe, 4 October 1991.
  20. ^ "Radiation, Race, and Molly Bloom: Nadine Gordimer Talks with BookForum", BookForum, Feb / March 2006.
  21. ^ Gordimer wrote an account of the censorship in "What Happened to Burger's Daughter or How South African Censorship Works".
  22. ^ "Burger’s Daughter was the last of Gordimer’s novels to enter the censorship system. Though her short-story collection A Soldier’s Embrace (1980) was scrutinised and passed in 1980, July’s People (1981), A Sport of Nature (1987), and My Son’s Story (1990) appear not to have been submitted in any of their editions." Peter D. McDonald, The Literature Police: Apartheid Censorship and Its Cultural Consequences (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2009), 239.
  23. ^ BBC News, "South Africa reinstates authors", 22 April 2001.
  24. ^ a b "Gordimer detractors 'insulting', says Asmal Archived 30 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine", News24.com, 19 April 2001.
  25. ^ Anuradha Kumar, "New Boundaries", The Hindu, 1 August 2004.
  26. ^ a b c Donald Morrison, "Nadine Gordimer", Time Magazine, 60 Years of Heroes (2006).
  27. ^ "Nobel Prize in Literature 1991 – Press Release". Nobel Media AB. 2014. Retrieved 10 December 2017.
  28. ^ Christopher S. Wren, "Former Censors Bow Coldly to Apartheid Chronicler", New York Times, 6 October 1991.
  29. ^ "Nadine Gordimer: A Life Well Lived (1923-2014)". PEN America. 14 July 2014. Retrieved 3 March 2024.
  30. ^ a b Agence France-Presse, "Nobel laureates join battle against AIDS", 1 December 2004.
  31. ^ Gordimer and literary giants fight AIDS Archived 8 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine, iafrica.com, 29 November 2004.
  32. ^ Nadine Gordimer and Anthony Sampson, Letter to The New Review of Books, 16 November 2000.
  33. ^ a b c "Nadine Gordimer, anti-apartheid author, dies aged 90". The Telegraph. 14 July 2014. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  34. ^ South Africa: The New Threat to Freedom The New York Review of Books. 24 May 2012
  35. ^ Gordimer’s family requests privacy SAPA. 15 July 2014
  36. ^ a b Anthony Sampson on Nadine Gordimer: 'She was conscious of living in a land of heroes' The Guardian. 16 July 2014
  37. ^ Jannika Hurwitt, Interview with Gordimer, Paris Review, 88, Summer 1983.
  38. ^ a b 'Prickly' Gordimer, anti-apartheid star The Jewish Chronicle. 17 July 2014
  39. ^ Nadine Gordimer Defends Decision to Attend J'lem Writers Conference Haaretz. 30 April 2008
  40. ^ Nadine Gordimer, chronicler of South Africa, dies at 90 The Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 14 July 2014
  41. ^ Magdalena, Karina. "Die miesies hy skryf". Die Burger. 26 November 2011
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  60. ^ J. R. Ramakrishnan (19 June 2015). "'In the Country,' by Mia Alvar". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 April 2016. ... Alvar's elegant examination of the political wife is reminiscent of the long-suffering spouses and familial enablers of political men in Nadine Gordimer's fiction...
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Further reading

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Brief biographies

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Obituaries

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Critical studies

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  • Stephen Clingman, The Novels of Nadine Gordimer: History from the Inside (1986)
  • John Cooke, The Novels of Nadine Gordimer
  • Andrew Vogel Ettin, Betrayals of the Body Politic: The Literary Commitments of Nadine Gordimer (1993)
  • Dominic Head, Nadine Gordimer (1994)
  • Christopher Heywood, Nadine Gordimer (1983)
  • Santayana, Vivek. 2021. Most difficult and least glamorous : the politics of style in the late works of Nadine Gordimer. University of Edinburgh: Doctoral dissertation.
  • Rowland Smith, editor, Critical Essays on Nadine Gordimer (1990)
  • Barbara Temple-Thurston, Nadine Gordimer Revisited (1999) ISBN 978-0-8057-4608-2
  • Kathrin Wagner, Rereading Nadine Gordimer (1994)
  • Louise Yelin, From the Margins of Empire: Christina Stead, Doris Lessing, Nadine Gordimer (1998)
  • Nadine Gordimer's Politics Article by Jillian Becker in Commentary, February 1992

Articles

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Ian Fullerton, Politics and the South African Novel in English, in Bold, Christine (ed.) Cencrastus No. 3, Summer 1980, pp. 22 & 23

Short reviews

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Speeches and interviews

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Biographies

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  • Ronald Suresh Roberts, No Cold Kitchen: A Biography of Nadine Gordimer (2005)

Research archives

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