Communities of Dialogue Russian and Ukrainian Émigrés in Modernist Prague

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207687

Names

Carrol Clarkson

pp. 133-152

Abstract

In an interview with J.M. Coetzee in 1983, Tony Morphet comments on the setting of Life & Times of Michael K: "The location of the story is very highly specified. Cape Town — Stellenbosch — Prince Albert — somewhere between 1985–1990" (Coetzee and Morphet, "Two Interviews with J.M. Coetzee 455). A similar observation might be made of later novels such as Age of Iron and Disgrace, where Coetzee's literary landscapes are evoked with equally striking particularity. The migrations of the fictional characters are meticulously tracked in the recognizable co-ordinates of named towns, roads, and landmarks of South Africa's Cape regions: Salem, Grahamstown, Port Elizabeth, Donkin Square, Guguletu, Buitenkant Street, Schoonder Street, Rondebosch Common, Signal Hill, Touws River, the Outeniqua Mountains …Tony Morphet, in his interview with Coetzee, suggests that the use of familiar place-names brings Michael K "very close to us' (by "us' he means a South African readership), and Morphet asks whether Coetzee is "looking for a more direct and immediate conversation with South African readers' (Coetzee and Morphet 455). It is tempting to assume immediate reference to — and direct conversation about — the real world when a writer makes use of recognizable names,1 and yet Coetzee's novels — arguably this includes Boyhood and Youth — are works of fiction.

Publication details

Published in:

Clarkson Carrol (2009) J. M. Coetzee: countervoices. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Pages: 133-152

DOI: 10.1057/9780230245440_6

Full citation:

Clarkson Carrol (2009) Names, In: J. M. Coetzee, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 133–152.