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Cry, the Beloved Country

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Title: Cry, the Beloved Country


1
by Alan Paton Background information and context
2
Alan Paton (1903-1988)
  • Click info on Paton
  • http//zar.co.za/paton.htm

3
Background you need to know
  • Apartheid in South Africa
  • http//home.snu.edu/dwilliam/f97projects/aparthei
    d/Document5.html

4
Background (2)
  • European Colonization of South Africa
    http//www.unu.edu/unupress/unupbooks/uu29me/uu29m
    e03.htm

5
Background (3)
  • Johannesburg founded in 1886
  • Mining town vast, newly discovered gold deposits
  • Center of the most populated region of South
    Africa.

6
Key Facts
  • Narrator 3rd person omniscient primarily also
    many other points of view on temporary basis
  • Point of View Books I III told from Kumalos
    point of view Book II from Jarvis
  • Other chapters told from montage of voices from
    different areas of S African society
  • Narrator also shows things from other characters
    perspective occasionally
  • Intercalary chapters chapters which do not move
    the plot along, but give key information
    necessary to understand the novel

7
More Key Facts
  • Tone lyrical, grieving, occasionally bitter
  • Tense past
  • Setting
  • Mid-40s, just after WW2
  • Ndostsheni Johannesburg, SA
  • Protagonists Stephen Kumalo James Jarvis
  • Major Conflict
  • Stephen Kumalo struggles against the forces
    white oppression, corruption of city life that
    destroy his family country

8
Plot Summary
  • black priest from Ixopo, Stephen Kumalo
  • goes to Johannesburg to search for his son and
    sister
  • discovers that his sister has become a prostitute
  • his son has murdered the son of a white Ixopo
    farmer
  • Stephen Kumalo returns to Ixopo with his pregnant
    daughter-in-law, and his sister's sonsister
    remains behind
  • Kumalo seeks to reconcile with the murdered mans
    father
  • bring Gertrude back to the village.

9
Story Chart
  • Rising Action
  • Kumalo travels to Johannesburg to search for his
    son
  • Climax
  • Absalom is arrested for the murder of Arthur
    Jarvis
  • Falling Action
  • Absalom is sentenced to death
  • Jarvis works with Kumalo to improve conditions in
    the village
  • Absalom is hanged

10
Biblical Reference Absalom
  • There are many biblical references throughout the
    novel.
  • Names Absalom, the son of Stephen Kumalo, shares
    his name with the son of King David, who rose up
    against his father in rebellion.
  • Also, in the New Testament Book of Acts, Saint
    Stephen was a martyr who died rather than give up
    his beliefs.

11
More Biblical Allusions
  • Absalom requests that his son's name be Peter
  • Name is one of Jesus's disciples
  • Peter's known for impulsiveness
  • after Christ's arrest, he denied knowing Jesus
    three times, and later wept in grief over this.
  • After the resurrection, Peter renewed his
    commitment to Christ and to spreading the Gospel.
  • All of this suggests Absalom's final repentance,
    and his commitment to the faith of his father.

12
More Allusions
  • Arthur Jarvis is described as having a large
    collection of books on Abraham Lincoln, and the
    writings of Lincoln figure heavily in the novel.
  • Paton describes Arthur's son by using the same
    characteristics that Arthur had when he was a
    child. This alludes to the rebirth of Christ.

13
Stephen Kumalo
  • One of the 2 protagonists in novel
  • Elderly Zulu Anglican priest
  • Spent entire life in quiet country village
    Ndotsheni
  • Quiet, humble, strong faith in God
  • Has outbursts of anger his words occasionally
    cause pain to his family
  • Dignity faith despite the suffering he sustains
  • Moral center of novel
  • His journey is a physical one to find his son
    sister in the corrupt city

14
James Jarvis
  • Novel's other protagonist
  • White landowner whose farm overlooks Ndotsheni
  • Jarvis a conservative farmer
  • Man of few words
  • Only son, Arthur, murdered
  • Leads him to Johannesburg
  • Begins to rethink his opinions and his
    relationship to the villagers that live below his
    farm.
  • His journey is a spiritual, mental one

15
Theophilus Msimangu
  • Young minister at the Mission House in Sophiatown
  • Msimangu understands the problems that face
    South Africa
  • He helps Kumalo understand the people and places
  • Sympathetic to Kumalo, makes Kumalo's quest his
    top priority.

16
Absalom Kumalo
  • Stephen Kumalo's son
  • Leaves home for Johannesburg
  • Absalom turns to crime
  • Commits murder
  • Lack moral compass, influenced by bad companions

17
John Kumalo
  • Stephen Kumalo's brother
  • Formerly humble carpenter and a Christian
  • John Kumalo becomes a successful businessman
  • One of the three most powerful black politicians
    in Johannesburg
  • He has a beautiful and powerful voice, uses to
    speak out for the rights of black South Africans,
    but he fears punishment is corrupted.

18
Arthur Jarvis
  • Arthur Jarvis first appears after he has been
    murdered
  • He is an engineer and fierce advocate for justice
    for black South Africans
  • Is shot dead in his home by Absalom Kumalo

19
Mrs. Kumalo
  • Strong-minded, supportive, loving wife
  • Makes household decisions with her husband as an
    equal
  • She bears hardship gracefully
  • Kumalo is inclined to brood
  • She rouses him to action
  • She supplies the courage needed to read the bad
    news the mail brings from Johannesburg

20
Gertrude Kumalo 
  • Stephen Kumalo's sister
  • Original reason for his trip to Johannesburg
  • Gertrude, twenty-five years younger than Kumalo
  • Went to Johannesburg to find her husband
  • Turns to alcohol and prostitution
  • Her young son returns to Ndotsheni with Stephen
    Kumalo, but she remains in Johannesburg

21
Form Structure
  • Problem or sociological novel
  • Social issue is racial discrimination in South
    Africa
  • Propaganda novel?
  • Strongly influenced by Steinbecks Grapes of
    Wrath
  • Books are alike in structure
  • Chapters 9, 12, 23 are intercalary or inserted
    chapters
  • Give you a picture of society as a whole
  • Do not advance the plot
  • Lead to full understanding of the setting for the
    story

22
Structure
  • Novel is circular
  • Begins in Natal-Moves to Johannesburg-Ends in
    Ndotsheni in Natal
  • Plot Themes presented in 3 part structure
  • Book 1 search for Stephen Kumalos son sister
  • Theme of tribal disintegration stronger than
    tribal rebuilding in this book
  • Book 2 trial, intercalary chapters give more
    social issues background
  • Both major themes appear, but breakdown of
    traditional order is still stronger
  • Book 3 resolution Kumalo Jarvis work to
    change village of Ndotsheni
  • Stress on theme of rebuilding promise of hope
    for future

23
Style
  • Realistic
  • Uses symbols
  • Names of characters
  • Titihoya birdsymbol of land
  • Meals sometimes a communion
  • Mountains uplands seen as good places
  • Valleys, places of decayexcept Johannesburg
  • Language
  • More common English patterns when white man is
    thinking
  • Harsh to the point more complicated than his
    main style

24
Language
  • Paton invented special style for the book
  • Simple vocabulary
  • Use of biblical patterns
  • Use of Zulu other Bantu languages
  • Symbols like light darkness
  • Short clauses connected by but or and
  • Repetition
  • Used to represent speech or thoughts translated
    from Zulu give comments from the omniscient
    narrator
  • Both styles are seen in Chapter 22 where
    prosecutors style contrasts with Absaloms

25
Theme Reconciliation between fathers sons
  • Search of 2 fathers for their sons
  • Kumalos is a physical search
  • When Kumalo Absalom are reunited they are
    strangers to each other
  • Trial brings them closer but verdict allows
    Kumalo to finally understand his son
  • Letters from prison show repentance the little
    boy he remembers

26
Jarvis his son
  • Not a physical search
  • Realizes knows nothing about his son
  • Arthur was an advocate for South Africas black
    population
  • He his father disagree on this
  • Reconciliation with a dead man occurs
  • Jarvis finds the way through Arthurs writings
  • Gives Jarvis clear insight into who Arthur has
    become
  • Jarvis feels pride for his son

27
Inequality Injustice
  • Massive inequalities towards non-whites
  • Black Africans can only own limited amounts of
    land poor quality, overworked
  • Land wont support young adultsthey must leave
    to work in the mines or Johannesburg
  • Absalom Gertrudeexamples
  • Economic lure of city leads to danger
  • Limited opportunities to earn money separated
    from family and tradition turn to crime
  • City full of slums and gangs

28
  • These conditions lead to anger and violence
  • Rob white homes
  • Whites become afraid and loose sympathy for the
    blacks
  • More injustice occurs and this makes situation
    worse
  • Absaloms lawyer claims Absalom is societys
    victim
  • Whites get government troops to crack down and
    the situation explodes

29
Christianity and Injustice
  • Kumalos main source of strength is God
  • Christianity also aids in resisting oppression
  • Arthur Jarvis calls the mine policies
    un-Christian
  • Religion is seen as a way to bring social justice
    without violence
  • Christianity is also part of the injustice
  • Black priests paid less than white ones
  • Religion says to suffer not fight back
  • Arthur Jarvis also discusses that religious
    figures claim God wants whites to rule blacks

30
Depiction of Nature
  • Contrasts the beauty of Natal against the
    ugliness of South Africa
  • Hills Rivers of the whites more fruitful
    lovely
  • Land of the black farmers barren, dry, hostile
  • Contrast between beauty of the land vs. ugliness
    of society shows necessity of change
  • Also, offers hope
  • Land can be restored
  • Titihoya bird represents the landhas deserted
    the barren land around Ndotsheni, but still
    around the white farms higher up

31
Repentance
  • Many characters lose temper in novel
  • Msimangu when learns Absalom abandoned his
    girlfriend
  • Young man at reformatory is mad at Absalom
  • Kumalo loses temper at wife, sons girlfriend,
    his brother, sister
  • Sometimes scenes are ugly
  • Acts are met by repentance
  • Characters are forgiven
  • Pattern demonstrates power of caring to overcome
    bitterness

32
Repeated Phrases
  • Phrases repeated show subtle changes in meaning
  • As was the custom/or it was not the custom
  • Kumalo expects to be treated as an inferior
  • When the custom is brokenphrase shows how
    important these small acts are
  • Not a thing done lightly shows this
  • Reconciliation scenes
  • Repetition of these phrases shows how often these
    taboos are changing

33
Symbols
  • Church
  • Ndotsheni church simple, rough structure
  • Represents faith that is humbleleaky roof,
    little shelter
  • Church closely linked to Kumalo
  • Jarviss offer to build a new church is symbol of
    his commitment to the village friendship with
    Kumalo

34
Kaffir Boy-Mark Mathabane
  • Excerpt from a novel
  • Author born in South Africa, 1960
  • Mother dragged him to school when he was 7stayed
    in school to spite his father who beat the mother
    for taking him
  • Lived in Alexandra, a township outside
    Johannesburg
  • Approximately 150,000 lived in an area of 1
    square mile
  • Lived in a shack 15 by 15 and slept on
    cardboard sheets under the kitchen table

35
Story excerpt
  • Excerpt we read was when his Grandmother took him
    to her employers home
  • They gave him books and occasionally work
  • Also gave him a used tennis racket
  • He will teach himself to play and enters a
    tournament in 1977
  • Loses tournament but gains scholarship to school
    in US
  • At 18 leaves South Africa
  • Tennis was his way to further his education and
    get out of South Africa
  • Only through education would blacks gain rights

36
Mathabane conclusion
  • From experience with the white family who helped
    him learned are good and bad whites just as good
    and bad blacks
  • Experience in US taught him racism everywhere
    just less obvious here
  • Has worked to gain opportunities for urban youth
    both here and in South Africa

37
A Life for a Life
  • Short story by Alan Paton
  • Brutal act of violence of a violent person who is
    acting with the authority of society
  • The white farmer is killed so someone must pay
    for thissomeone of color
  • Title important because the death/murder of Enoch
    Maarman by Robertsse
  • Deliberate act of murder against an innocent man
    that is allowed by society
  • Maarman is a Hottentot an African tribe located
    around Capetown, South Africa

38
Hottentots
  • Khoekhoe
  • Proper term for this tribe
  • Hottentots is considered offensive as name was
    given by European settlers who took over the area
    around Capetown
  • This group was one of the 3 original inhabitants
    of South Africa with the Bantu and San tribes

39
Drink in the Passage
  • Also by Alan Pato
  • Liberal whites long to have a relationship with
    the African blacks
  • Edward Simelane personifies all that is best in
    the natives according to them
  • Their fear however keeps them from inviting him
    into their homes and so he is left standing in
    the hallway
  • This puts him at even greater risk
  • Whites in story represent ineffectual
    ambivalent efforts of the liberal whites in South
    Africa
  • Protest treatment of natives yet lack power

40
Drink . . . continued
  • Protests attract government attention and more
    repressive acts towards natives
  • Paton worries that South Africa will never change
  • Much like the white family in Kaffir Boy
    excerptwant to help but in a way that wont take
    away from material wealth of the whites

41
Mother and Child by Mike Munyaradzi
42
Why is this novel so important?
  • Doris Lessing, the novelist and 2007 Nobel
    laureate in literature said
  • What you have to remember is that the whole of
    southern Africa was seen as a very happy, fun
    place full of satisfied blacks. Cry, the Beloved
    Country destroyed that vision.
  • Cry, the Beloved Country is the greatest novel
    to emerge out of the tragedy of South Africa, and
    one of the best novels of our time.
  • The New Republic

43
Helpful Hint
  • As you read the book, remember to refer to the
    back, which has a GLOSSARY of African terms you
    may not be familiar with.
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