DisgraceBy: J.M. Coetzee Category: FICTION Guide Created By: Lorrie Discussion Leader(s): Lorrie and Traude Click here to visit the discussion
Guide Description"J.M. Coetzee's new novel Disgrace, which last week won the South Afrian writer his second Booker Prize is an absolute page-turner, profound, rich and remarkable ... is destined to be a classic." New York Post, Nov. 7, 1999
Plot Synopsis"Disgrace won the 1999 Booker Prize making Coetzee a winner for an unprecedented second time. This followed other novels received exceptionally well by critics and other authors alike, including Foe and Age of Iron, both published by Penguin.
"Disgrace, like Age of Iron, is set in Cape Town. The novel takes as its central character David Lurie, a 52 year old university professor in Cape Town. From the beginning of the novel he is a picaresque but complex character, twice divorced and confessing a multitude of sexual adventures to the reader. However he is drawn into one sexual adventure too many——an affair with a student that brings with it allegations of harrassment. David is willing to admit his guilt, but refuses to yield to pressure to repent publicly. Instead, he resigns and retreats to his daughter Lucy's isolated smallholding.
"Whilst staying with his daughter, we become aware of tensions between them: tensions caused by the different ways in which they live their lives. He is a self-professed city dweller who prizes literature and high culture. Lucy is quietly progressive and seeks to find alternative values. The focus of Lucy's love of animals are the dogs that she keeps in kennels but which also constitute her protection——they are her guard dogs. As such they form a potent symbol but they also become increasingly central to the story. When the smallholding is attacked only David escapes with superficial injury.
"The consequences of the attack reverberate through the book and force the reader to confront difficult moral and ethical choices. The possibility of having to live "like a dog" hangs over the ending of the novel, where the dogs become both objects of compassion and symbols of despair.
"This is a compelling, brilliant book and a worthy winner of its acclaim. Not a word is wasted or carelessly chosen." ——Penguin Readers Club, Penguin UK
Biography of the Author"John Michael Coetzee was born in Cape Town, South Africa, on February 9, 1940. He studied first at Cape Town, and later earned a Ph.D. degree in literature from the University of Texas at Austin. He returned to South Africa and joined the faculty of the University of Cape Town in 1972.
"His first novel, actually two novellas, Dusklands, which examined the parallels between Americans in Vietnam and the early Dutch settlers in South Africa, was published in 1974. Waiting for the Barbarians(1980), the story of a government magistrate's personal evolution into questioning the government for which he works, won South Africa's highest literary honor, the Central News Agency (CNA) Literary Award in 1980.
"He won the premier British award, the Booker Prize, for the first time in 1983, for the Life and Times of Michael K. In the same year he was appointed Professor of General Literature at the University of Cape Town, which post he still holds.
"On October 25th 1999, Coetzee became the first author to win the prestigious Booker award twice in its 31-year history, for his current novel, Disgrace.
J.M. Coetzee lives today in South Africa.[sic] [EDIT: Coetzee currently lives in Australia.] He has published seven other novels, a memoir Boyhood: Scenes From Provincial Life and several essay collections. He has won many other literary prizes including the Lannan Award for Fiction, the Jerusalem Prize and The Irish Times International Fiction Prize.
——Insane Tree: Hall of Fame
The author was awarded the 2003 Nobel Prize for literature.
Critical Reviews"Disgrace is not a hard or obscure book——it is, among other things, compulsively readable——but what it may well be is an authentically spiritual document, a lament for the soul of a disgraced century." ——The New Yorker
"——A subtly brilliant commentary on the nature and balance of power in his homeland...Disgrace is a mini-opera without music by a writer at the top of his form."
——Time
"——Mr. Coetzee, in prose lean yet simmering with feeling, has indeed achieved a lasting work: a novel as haunting and powerful as Albert Camus's The Stranger."
——The Wall Street Journal
"A tough, sad, stunning novel."
——Baltimore Sun
Questions
For Your Consideration:
- The novel begins by telling us that "For a man his age, fifty-two, divorced, he has, to his mind, solved the problem of sex rather well." What can you infer about David Lurie's character from this sentence? In what ways is it significant, particularly in relation to the events that follow, that he views sex as a "problem" and that his "solution" depends upon a prostitute?
- Lurie describes sexual intercourse with the prostitute Soraya as being like the copulation of snakes, "lengthy, absorbed, but rather abstract, rather dry, even at its
hottest." When he decides to seduce his student, Melanie, they are passing through the college gardens. After their affair has been discovered Melanie's father says that he never thought he was sending his daughter into "a nest of vipers." Lurie has also written a book about Faust and Mephistopheles and explicates for his class a poem by Byron about the fallen angel, Lucifer, whom Lurie describes as being "condemned to solitude." What do you think Coetzee is trying to suggest through this confluence of details? How clearly does Lurie himself understand his behavior? How does his reading of the Byron poem prefigure his own fate?
- When Lurie shows up unexpectedly at Melanie's flat, "she is too surprised to resist the intruder who thrusts himself upon her." Later, he tells himself that it was "not rape, not quite that, but undesired nevertheless, undesired to the core." How do you view what happens in this scene? Is it rape?
- How would you characterize Lurie's attitude before the academic committee investigating the charges of harassment brought against him? Is the committee justified in asking for more than an admission of guilt? Why does Lurie refuse to
assent to the fairly simple demands that would save his job? What consequences, practical and spiritual, follow from this refusal?
- Lurie claims that in his relationship with Melanie, he was "a servant of Eros" and that his case rests on the rights of desire. On the God who makes even the small birds quiver." Is this an acceptable explanation of his actions? Do you think it is sincere?
- What parallels do you see between the attack on Lurie and his daughter Lucy and Lurie's own treatment of Melanie and Melanie's father? To what extent do you think Coetzee wants us to see Lucy's rape as a punishment for Lurie's undesired
sexual encounter with Melanie? Is this an instance of the sins of the father being visited upon the child?
- In the course of the attack, Lurie is burned and blinded, temporarily, in one eye. What symbolic value might attach to these events? In what other ways has Lurie been blind? What significance does fire have for him?
- Why does Lucy refuse to report her rape? How is her decision related to the changed relations between blacks and whites in post-apartheid South Africa? Why does she accept Petrus' protection even after he has been implicated in the attack?
- How do you feel about Lucy's neighbor Petrus? To what extent do you think he was involved in the attack? What are his motives? What are the motives of the attackers? In what ways does Petrus embody the transition South Africa is making
between apartheid and democracy? In what sense will Lucy's child also represent that transition?
- During a heated argument about whether animals have souls and how they should be treated, Lurie tells his daughter: "As for the animals, by all means let us be kind to them. But let us not lose perspective. We are of a different order of creation from the animals. Not higher necessarily, just different. So if we are going to be kind, let it be out of simple generosity, not because we feel guilty or fear retribution." In what ways does this speech echo the logic of racial oppression and apartheid?
- Throughout Disgrace, Lurie contemplates writing an opera based on Byron's last years in Italy. Why is he so drawn to Byron? How does Byron's situation in Italy resemble Lurie's own? What ironies do you see in the fact that Lurie composes the music for his opera on a banjo and that he considers including a part for a dog?
- From virtually the first page to the last, David Lurie suffers one devastating humiliation after another. He loses his job and his reputation. He is forced to flee Cape Town to live with his daughter on her smallholding in the country. There he is beaten and burned and trapped helplessly in the bathroom while his daughter is raped. Finally, he ends up ferrying dead dogs to the incinerator. Is there a meaning or purpose in his suffering? Is he in some way better off at the end of the novel than he was at the beginning? How has he changed?
- Disgrace is narrated in the present tense, largely through David Lurie's consciousness, though not in the first person. What effect does this method of narration have on how the story unfolds? How would the novel differ if told in the
past tense? At what points do you sense a divergence between Lurie's view of himself and the narrator's view of him?
- In what ways can the events dramatized in Disgrace be seen as a result of South Africa's long history of racial oppression? What does the novel imply about the larger themes of retribution and forgiveness and reversals of fortune? About the relation between the powerful and the powerless?
——Source: Reading Group Guides.Com
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