Open Access
American Research Journal of English and Literature
ISSN (Online): 2378-9026
DOI: 10.46568/arjel
South African Literature: Deconstructing Patriarchal and Colonial Ideology in J.M. Coetzee’s, In the Heart of the Country
Professor, Faculty of Letters and Human Sciences, Department of English, Mohammed V University, Morocco
Yahyaoui Hanane, ”South African Literature: Deconstructing Patriarchal and Colonial Ideology in J.M.
Coetzee’s, In the Heart of the Country” American Research Journal of English and Literature, vol 4, no. 1, 2018, pp.
1-15.
Abstract
This paper examines the silence and rebellion of the western female who is marginalised in the Afrikaner
colonial and patriarchal culture in South Africa in the late 1970’s. Through an analysis of J.M. Coetzee’s, In the
Heart of the Country (1977), I attempt to explore the gender dimension and therefore deconstruct patriarchal
and colonial ideology. My aim is to interrogate the Afrikaner colonial culture through the point of view of a
farmer’s daughter who is deemed as a subordinated woman within the Afrikaner colonial formation. In effect, I
elucidate and unravel the way the main protagonist challenges the patriarchal colonial culture by engendering
a specific feminine discourse of language which concentrates on plurality and attempts to represent what has
been repressed by masculine modes of writings. The paper eventually demonstrates the failure of the liberal
humanist subject to achieve reciprocity with the other and therefore transcends the colonial ideology between
coloniser and colonised.