- Title
- JM Coetzee's Disgrace and the Task of the Imagination:
- Creator
- Marais, Mike
- Date Issued
- 2006
- Date
- 2006
- Type
- text
- Type
- article
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10962/144126
- Identifier
- vital:38313
- Identifier
- DOI: 10.2979/JML.2006.29.2.75
- Description
- In an early review of Disgrace, Jane Taylor first relates this novel's treatment of violence in post-apartheid South Africa to the European Enlightenment's legacy of the autonomy of the human subject (25), in terms of which each individual is conceived of as a living consciousness separated totally from every other consciousness, and then discusses J.M. Coetzee's postulation of the sympathetic imagination as a potential corrective to the violence attendant on monadic individuality. Taylor makes the telling point that, in the eighteenth century, the notions of sensibility, sympathy, and compassion, which the novel repeatedly invokes, were self-consciously developed as an ethical response to the instrumentalist logic of autonomous individuality and, in this regard, she cites Adam Smith's observation in The Theory of Moral Sentiments that "By the imagination we place ourselves in his situation, we conceive ourselves enduring all the same torments, we enter as it were into his body, and become in some measure the same person with him, and thence form some idea of his sensation" (qtd. in Taylor 25).
- Format
- 19 pages
- Format
- Language
- English
- Relation
- Journal of Modern Literature
- Relation
- Marais, M., 2006. JM Coetzee's Disgrace and the Task of the Imagination. Journal of Modern Literature, 29(2), pp.75-93.
- Relation
- Journal of Modern Literature volume 29 number 2 75 93 2006 1529-1464
- Rights
- Publisher
- Rights
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