Chapter 1: Introduction: “Spaces of Transition: the Worlding of the South African Novel”.- Chapter 2: Zakes Mda’s Black Intellectuals: Utopia and the Public Sphere in Ways of Dying and The Whale Caller.- Chapter 3: Fictions of Terror: the Worlding of South African Fiction.- Chapter 4: Theatres of Truth in the Post-Apartheid Novel.- Chapter 5: White (Dis)Possession in Marlene van Niekerk’s Triomf and Damon Galgut’s The Good Doctor: Land, Race, Class.- Chapter 6: South African AIDS Narratives and the Question of Modernity.- Chapter 7: Environmental Racism and the Post-Apartheid Novel.- Chapter 8: Art, Visual Culture and the Work of Cultural Memory in Ivan Vladislavić’s Portrait with Keys (2006).
Jane Poyner is Senior Lecturer in World and Postcolonial Literatures in the Department of English at the University of Exeter, UK. She has published essays on South African literature and culture, including several books on J. M. Coetzee. She also writes on issues of environmental justice.
‘Via an analysis of intellectual spaces in the “new” South Africa, The Worlding of the South African Novel offers compelling and timely readings of a variety of works spanning 1994 to 2014 depicting the socioeconomic contradictions of the post-apartheid nation. Poyner’s work explores how, via their fiction, contemporary novelists have challenged South Africa’s apparent liberation in 1994 and grappled provocatively with its current struggles.’
— Laura Wright, Professor of English, Western Carolina University, USA
‘Poyner’s study is essential reading for anyone interested in post-apartheid literary culture. Highlighting the contradictions between the political freedoms accompanying the formal end of apartheid and the ongoing economic inequalities produced by South Africa’s version of capitalist modernity, Poyner demonstrates how in both content and form the novels of the last thirty years have captured the social realities of the ‘rainbow nation’.’
—David Johnson, Professor of Literature, The Open University, UK
The Worlding of the South African Novel develops from an apparent paradox: that despite momentous political transition from apartheid to democracy, little in South Africa’s socio-economic reality has actually changed. Poyner discusses how the contemporary South African novel engages with this reality. In forms of literary experiment, the novels open up intellectual spaces shaping or contesting the idea of the “new South Africa”. The mediatising of truth at the TRC, how best to deal with a spectacular yet covert past, the shaping of an inclusive public sphere, HIV/AIDS as the preeminent site testing capitalist modernity, white anxieties about land reform, disease as environmental injustice and the fostering of an enabling cultural memory: Poyner argues that through these key nodes of intellectual thought, the novels speak to recent debates on world-literature to register the “shock” of an uneven capitalist modernity.