The 2003 Nobel Prize for literature was awarded today to the acclaimed South African novelist, J.M. Coetzee. Known for his spare, often bleak prose, Coetzee, a white South African, has been one of the country’s most probing writers on injustice and upheaval during and after apartheid.
Hear an excerpt from his 1999 book, “Disgrace,” a book that grapples with South Africa’s new, often violent racial complexity. In this excerpt, the book’s main character, David Lurie and his daughter Lucy are viciously attacked, shaking Lurie’s belief in the viability of the “new” South Africa.
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