Atsiliepimai
Aprašymas
First published in 1883, under the pseudonym Ralph Iron, The Story of an African Farm follows the intertwined lives of Lyndall, Waldo, and Em on a remote Karoo farm, where childhood longing hardens into spiritual revolt and social critique. Schreiner's prose moves between stark realism, philosophical allegory, and lyrical meditation, placing colonial South African experience within Victorian debates on faith, gender, labor, and empire. Schreiner's own life illuminates the novel's urgency: born in the Cape Colony to missionary parents, she worked as a governess and educated herself amid isolation, religious doubt, and political awakening. Her rejection of orthodox Christianity, sympathy for the dispossessed, and fierce commitment to women's intellectual and sexual freedom informed Lyndall's unforgettable challenge to marriage, respectability, and patriarchal authority. This is an essential novel for readers interested in feminist thought, colonial modernity, and the transformation of the English novel. It rewards attentive reading not only as a landmark of South African literature but also as a searching inquiry into how individuals seek meaning when inherited beliefs and social forms can no longer sustain them.
First published in 1883, under the pseudonym Ralph Iron, The Story of an African Farm follows the intertwined lives of Lyndall, Waldo, and Em on a remote Karoo farm, where childhood longing hardens into spiritual revolt and social critique. Schreiner's prose moves between stark realism, philosophical allegory, and lyrical meditation, placing colonial South African experience within Victorian debates on faith, gender, labor, and empire. Schreiner's own life illuminates the novel's urgency: born in the Cape Colony to missionary parents, she worked as a governess and educated herself amid isolation, religious doubt, and political awakening. Her rejection of orthodox Christianity, sympathy for the dispossessed, and fierce commitment to women's intellectual and sexual freedom informed Lyndall's unforgettable challenge to marriage, respectability, and patriarchal authority. This is an essential novel for readers interested in feminist thought, colonial modernity, and the transformation of the English novel. It rewards attentive reading not only as a landmark of South African literature but also as a searching inquiry into how individuals seek meaning when inherited beliefs and social forms can no longer sustain them.
Atsiliepimai