J. M. Coetzee Foe (3) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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J. M. Coetzee Foe (3)

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... p. 129 meets the young girl with her nurse Amy struggle for authorship/ownership ... diving to see the kraken, shark (or a guardian wrapped in rotting ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: J. M. Coetzee Foe (3)


1
J. M. Coetzee Foe (3)
  • Writing, Identity and History

2
Outline
  • Starting Questions
  • Structure of the Novel
  • Story-telling and writing
  • Susans desire purposes
  • Her story-telling and
  • Her writing vs. Foes
  • The central mysteries
  • Ways of making sense of the past
  • Friday and his language
  • Diving into the Wreck

3
Starting Questions
  • What do you think of Susan Bartons rejection of
    the young girl named Susan Barton?
  • What do you think about the depiction of Friday?
    Should he be mute and irresponsive?
  • What do you think about the ending? Who is the
    narrator? Why is it repetitive?
  • How do we deal with our own
  • Island-isolation (71) confinement (81)
  • lack of knowledge about the past
  • Emptiness substance of existence. (82 152)

4
Foe Structure
  • Chap 1 her experience on the island (Bartons
    speech to Foe)
  • Chap 2 Barton and Friday in London (epistolary
    form)
  • in Clock Lane,
  • Foes attic writing letters to Foe waiting
  • the young girl pp. 72 77
  • Speech to Friday 77-87
  • To Foe pp. 87 on writing
  • To the forest with the girl 89
  • To Foe -- Robe and Fridays dance
  • Attempts to teach Friday music 95- 97
  • Set Friday free

5
Foe Structure
  • Chap 3 Barton Friday in Foes hiding place,
    Struggle for authorship (Bs narration)
  • Susan and Foe
  • discussion of plot
  • Three parables of women and writing 1) death-bed
    confession 2) daughter as a way to extend ones
    life 3) Bartons Muse as both goddess and
    begetter
  • Meeting the girl again
  • Muse and sex
  • Fridays silence --
  • The untold stories buried in Friday
  • teaching him to write Africa, House Mother

6
Foe Structure
  • Chap 4 from Foes attic to dive into the sea
    wrecks a first-person narration
  • Repetition
  • in the attic and under the sea
  • listening for Fridays voice.
  • Variation from voices of the island to an
    ongoing stream

7
Bartons Desire and Purposes
  • Sense of urgency, getting the story told is her
    primary concern
  • Purposes
  • Memory longing for the island
  • Survival
  • Fame and Immortality
  • Money to send Friday back to Africa
  • Identity acquire substance of her identity
    (51) not just a fictional character

8
Bartons story-telling
  • sense of immediacy
  • address to you Foe, the girl, Friday
  • expecting audience response (7)
  • Re-telling the stories to remember them
    (repetition p. 5 11 Fridays tongue)
  • imagine things into existence p. 49 53, 61,
    etc.
  • Wants her story to be truthful 40 acknowledge
    her ignorance.

9
Bartons writing multiple interpretation
(applications)
  • Moment to assume writing position p. 65
  • Need to explain Fridays loss of tongue (blank
    page) ? multiple interpretation (Cruso or slave
    trader, mutilation or tribal custom)
  • Two paintings Fridays past pp. 68-69 84-
  • The use of kiss and desire in communicating
    with Friday p. 79-81

10
Bartons writing reconstruction
  • Like their work on the terraces 87
  • Like a painter adding hues to show contrast
    //episodes and their hidden meanings
  • Establishing the poles, the here and there ? easy
    93

11
Bartons writing vs. Foes
  • the more dramatic elements cannibal, musket,
    carpenters chest, younger Cruso, love for Barton
    p. 83

12
Bartons writing vs. Foes
  • Susan wants to be her own author
  • different plots reunion of mother and daughter,
    or survival on an island
  • Chap 3 p. 129 meets the young girl with her
    nurse Amy ? struggle for authorship/ownership

13
Bartons authorship vs. Foes
  • The daughter episode
  • p. 131 I am a free woman who asserts her freedom
    by telling her story according to her own
    desire.
  • (p. 133 daughter like ghost coming back to life
    -- losing her sense of authorship ) now all my
    life grows to be story and there is nothing of my
    own left to me.
  • Three stories ? muse as begetter
  • Sex Foes preying on the living
  • p. 150 Foe as a slaver turning his deaf ear to
    Susan
  • p. 152 Susan thinks of Foe as a mistress, as a
    wife.

14
Acknowledges her lack of understanding
  • The central mysteries pp. 83- 87
  • the terraces like tombs
  • The tongue pp. 84
  • Fridays submission
  • No desire
  • The scattering of petals

15
Ways of making sense of the past
  • Foe p. 135 -- also lost in the maze of
    doubting
  • Make a sign of ones blindness and return to it
    all the time.
  • plant a sign or marker in the ground where I
    stand so that in my future wanderings I shall
    have something to return to, . . .the more often
    I come back to the mark, . . .the more certainly
    I know I am lost. . . (135-36)

16
Friday and his language/silence
  • Multiple interpretation of his (lack of) response
  • (1) Forever enslaved
  • After the unnatural years with Cruso, he is
    like an animal wrapt entirely in itself (70)
  • eternal obedience? 98

17
Friday and his language/silence
  • (2) His silence loss
  • Like a whale and a spider p. 59
  • Connection to the time before Cruso p. 60 true
    stories buried in him (118)
  • Tongue (vs. heart) a member of play (85)
  • defenseless silence (p. 121)

18
Fridays languages Identity
  • (3) Has his languages but cannot communicate with
    them
  • Dance 92
  • Bass recorder
  • Dance like Friday 103-104understanding him
    seeing 119

19
Teaching Friday
  • Teaching him to write is teaching him whites
    language a way to establish identity?
  • Susanunderstands him, and acknowledges her lack
    of complete understanding
  • Is he stupid or laughing at me? 146
  • Foe not teaching him is to keep his desires
    dark to us
  • Susan He desires to be liberated, and I do
    too. 148

20
Fridays languages identity
  • Susan teaches him but questions language
  • How does he know freedom? How is Friday to
    recover his freedom? Are we free?
  • There will always be a voice in him to whisper
    doubts, whether in words or nameless sounds or
    tunes or tones. (149)
  • Friday is not free, but he is not in subjection.
    150

21
Diving into the Wreck Twice
  • (p. 142 It is for us to open Fridays mouth and
    hear what it holds silence, perhaps, or a roar,
    Foe. Who?)
  • People
  • straw-and-paper-like existence their bodies
  • A plague of the author with writing too small
    to read

22
Diving into the Wreck Three times
  • Friday
  • His heart, his body,
  • Scar on his neck (Susans writing)
  • ? the narrator diving to see the kraken, shark
    (or a guardian wrapped in rotting fabric)
  • ? Susan and the captain
  • What is this ship? ? the Middle Passage
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