Külföldi torrent oldalak Bibliotik | BiB Rip Nadine Gordimer

A témát ebben részben 'Torrent oldalak hírei' Dark Angel hozta létre. Ekkor: 2014. július 30..

  1. Dark Angel / Guest

    RIP Nadine Gordimer

    Nadine Gordimer, who died on Sunday in Johannesburg at the age of 90, always claimed that she lacked the courage of a true revolutionary. She insisted that she was nothing at all like her friend Nelson Mandela, whom she first met in the early 1950s when she became one of the first white women to join the African National Congress in her native South Africa. But it is difficult to think of a contemporary author whose writing played as large a role as Gordimer's in convincing the world of the necessity for fundamental social change. In more than two dozen works of fiction that chronicled the terror and heartbreak of her country's policy of racial division, she heeded time and again George Orwell's clarion call to literary engagement: "In our age there is no such thing as 'keeping out of politics.'" In recognition of her contributions to literature and humanity, all ebooks by Gordimer will be freeleech for the next 48 hours.

    Gordimer, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1991, said that as a young writer she did not originally choose apartheid as her subject matter. But the rise to power of Afrikaner nationalists in 1948 forced the issue. As security forces brought the full weight of state terror to bear in enforcing racial separation, Gordimer became increasingly radicalized. Like the characters in her novels, she passed messages for black activists, hid some of the movement's most prominent leaders in her home when they were fugitives from the police, and secretly drove others to the border. Her second novel, A World of Strangers, published in 1958, was banned for twelve years in South Africa; The Late Bourgeois World, published in 1966, was banned for ten. By 1979 Gordimer had achieved such international renown that Burger's Daughter, the story of a child of revolutionary parents who makes her own way following the martyrdom of her father, was banned for just a few months, and would go on to become her best known book.

    You can find much of Gordimer's body of work in retail editions here. "When I won the Nobel Prize," Gordimer once said, "I didn't want it to be seen as a wreath on my grave." We encourage you to memorialize her passing by reading some of the fine work that will long live on.

    Discuss this post here!


    [​IMG]