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Cry, the Beloved Country

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Title: Cry, the Beloved Country


1
Cry, the Beloved Country
  • by Alan Paton

2
What I Know About South Africa
  • Pre-write anything that you know about South
    Africa.
  • We will later explore some of the features of
    South Africa as they relate to Paton's work and
    as they give a context for contemporary South
    Africa.

3
Alan Paton
  • - Born on January 11, 1903, on the east coast of
    southern Africa (formerly Natal) to evangelical
    Christians
  • - South Africa did not yet exist it was
    established in 1910 following the Anglo-Boer War.

4
Johannesburg

In 1886, gold mines were discovered and gave rise
to the creation of this city. The setting for
Cry, The Beloved Country, it provides a realistic
stage for the unfortunate racially based tension
that surmounted at the end of World War II due to
the increasing number of people moving to
Johannesburg from nearby outlying rural areas in
Africa.
5
Johannesburg, a major setting in Cry, the Beloved
Country
  • Current Population
  • 1,675,200

6
Johannesburg - 1931
7
English vs. Afrikaner vs. Zulu
The tension between British imperialists and the
Afrikaans, or white South African inhabitants
descendant of the Boers, pales in comparison to
the struggles between the Afrikaans and native
black Africans. The respective languages of
these two groups, Afrikaner and Zulu represent a
pronounced difference in culture and perspective.

8
Jan Hofmeyr

Hofmeyr helped Paton to make possible the
Diepkloof Reformatory, an institution that
approached the issue of juvenile delinquency in
terms of education rather than imprisonment.
9
Cry, the Beloved Country

Published in February 1948 in New York, Paton's
masterpiece has been translated into some twenty
different languages since. The work captures
the ethnic, political, and spiritual essence of
the setting in which it is based. It also brings
to surface universal considerations, such as
love, retribution, and justice.
10
Cry, the Beloved Country

The London publication of this work included the
subtitle, A Story of Comfort in Desolation,
which makes reference to the underlying tone of
hope in the midst of desperate events of which
the main character becomes aware throughout the
work.
11
Preconceived Concept Associations
  • For the following terms, write a two-sentence
    response to what each means to you. Avoid
    clichés.
  • Justice
  • Prejudice
  • Love
  • Family
  • Progress
  • Home

12
Title Inference
  • Looking only at the title, Cry, the Beloved
    Country, write what you might assume is a central
    theme to the novel.
  • Consider questions like the following Is Cry
    the name of the country? Is there irony in the
    title? Is this an imperative statement? Is
    beloved being used in the present or past
    tense?

13
The Work's Acclaim
  • Cry, the Beloved Country is noted for its ability
    to make others aware of South Africa and the ills
    of apartheid. Paton provides a combination of
    despair and hope that helps to enlighten the
    reader who is ignorant to the unjust events that
    occur in this part of the world that is often
    unrevealed to Americans.

14
South Africa's Acclaim
  • Population 43,997,828
  • Total Area
  • 471,008 sq mi

Today, eleven languages are recognized as the
official language. IsiZulu 23.8, IsiXhosa
17.6, Afrikaans 13.3, Sepedi 9.4, English
8.2, Setswana 8.2, Sesotho 7.9, Xitsonga 4.4,
other 7.2 (2001)?
South Africa's President Kgalema Motlanthe
15
South Africa during Paton's Life
  • 1910 - Formation of Union of South Africa by
    former British colonies of the Cape and Natal,
    and the Boer republics of Transvaal, and Orange
    Free State.
  • 1912 - Native National Congress founded, later
    renamed the African National Congress (ANC).
  • 1913 - Land Act introduced to prevent blacks,
    except those living in Cape Province, from buying
    land outside reserves.

16
South Africa during Paton's Life
  • 1914 - National Party founded.
  • 1918 - Secret Broederbond (brotherhood)
    established to advance the Afrikaner cause.
  • 1919 - South West Africa (Namibia) comes under
    South African administration.
  • Apartheid set in law

17
South Africa during Paton's Life
  • 1948 - Policy of apartheid (separateness) adopted
    when National Party (NP) takes power.
  • 1950 - Population classified by race. Group Areas
    Act passed to segregate blacks and whites.
    Communist Party banned. ANC responds with
    campaign of civil disobedience, led by Nelson
    Mandela.
  • 1960 - Seventy black demonstrators killed at
    Sharpeville. ANC banned.

18
South Africa during Paton's Life
  • 1961 - South Africa declared a republic, leaves
    the Commonwealth. Mandela heads ANC's new
    military wing, which launches sabotage campaign.
  • 1960s - International pressure against government
    begins, South Africa excluded from Olympic Games.

19
South Africa during Paton's Life
  • 1964 - ANC leader Nelson Mandela sentenced to
    life imprisonment.
  • 1966 September - Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd
    assassinated.
  • 1970s - More than 3 million people forcibly
    resettled in black 'homelands'.
  • 1976 - More than 600 killed in clashes between
    black protesters and security forces during
    uprising which starts in Soweto.

20
South Africa during Paton's Life
  • 1984-89 - Township revolt, state of emergency.
  • 1989 - FW de Klerk replaces PW Botha as
    president, meets Mandela. Public facilities
    desegregated. Many ANC activists freed.
  • 1990 - ANC unbanned, Mandela released after 27
    years in prison. Namibia becomes independent.
  • 1991 - Start of multi-party talks. De Klerk
    repeals remaining apartheid laws, international
    sanctions lifted. Major fighting between ANC and
    Zulu Inkatha movement.

21
Works Cited
  • http//www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0107983.html
  • http//news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/country_profiles
    /1069402.stm
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