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Cry, the Beloved Country

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Title: Cry, the Beloved Country


1
Cry, the Beloved Country
  • Alan Paton
  • 1903-1988

2
Authors Background
  • Born in Pietermaritzburg in the Natal Province in
    eastern South Africa, a region once known as
    Zululand
  • Parents were devout Christians
  • Attended Natal University College, where he
    studied mathematics and physics
  • was principal of the Diepkloof Reformatory for
    black youths in Johannesburgimproved conditions
    and sought to rehabilitate

3
Cry, the Beloved Country
  • Published in February 1948
  • Novel was a huge success in Europe and U.S. but
    unpopular in South Africa
  • The novel was translated into Zulu and a number
    of other languages and has sold well over 15
    million copies

4
Patons Social Conscience
  • Paton is considered a reformer and used his
    novels, short stories and essays as vehicles for
    his strong philosophical and moral viewpoints.
  • Strove to promote social change, particularly
    with regard to the treatment of native South
    Africans and the preservation of the land

5
Comments on Cry
  • Although circumstances drew Paton into political
    activity, it would be improper to regard this
    novel as a political document. While a primary
    concern of art is a formal beauty that may
    reflect justice, a primary concern of politics is
    the pursuit of power, and literature that serves
    it is propaganda, not art. Cry, the Beloved
    Country is not propaganda. Professor Callen

6
Literary Techniques
  • Intercalary Chapters or Inserteda passage that
    is not part of the narrative and does not involve
    the main characters. Usually used to make a
    thematic point, or to describe a scene that is
    apart from the action.
  • Dialogue---Patons use of dashes, rather than
    quotation marks, serves to quicken the pace of
    the dialogue and to emphasize words, rather than
    the speaker. Speaker is rarely identified,
    requiring the reader to pay careful attention.

7
Literary Techniques, Continued
  • Repetition of phrases, paragraphs and
    description
  • Language---use of Afrikaan words, such as veld,
    kraal, inkosana and umfumdisi. Note the word
    native is used exclusively to refer to black
    descendants of tribal Africans and not to the
    whites who had lived in South Africa for
    generations.

8
Genre The Social Realism Novel
  • Movement began the second half of the 19th
    century as artists and writers rebelled against
    Romanticisms idealized portrayal of life.
  • Focused on the harsh realities of the Industrial
    Revolution and the problems created by a growing
    urban migration.
  • The goal of art for the Realist is to achieve
    verisimilitudeto portray people, landscapes, and
    social situations as they actually weregiving a
    slice of life with photographic accuracy.

9
Classic traits of the Social Realism work
  • Vivid, unflinching, and usually unsentimental
    descriptions of actual places, though frequently
    these places are given fictional names
  • A plot that centers on a social or political
    conflict or problem. Common themes are racial
    injustice, the oppression of the poor, the
    degradation of the land, the problems caused by
    urban migration
  • Complex and often flawed characters or archetypal
    characters that represent different facets of
    society.

10
History of South Africa
  • Dutch arrived in 1652 and established Capetown.
    Within 5 years they began importing slaves.
  • Over the next 100 years, Dutch, German, and
    French Huguenot immigrants settled South Africa,
    pushing deeper in to tribal regions. These
    settlers were known as Afrikaners, or Boers, who
    developed a common language know as Afrikaans.
  • In 1795 Britain wrested control of Capetown from
    the Dutch, which led to a century of sporadic
    fighting over control of the region.

11
SA History, Continued
  • In 1820, British immigrants settled on the
    eastern coast of South Africa, in an attempt to
    push back the native tribes in that region.
  • British missionaries, opposed to slavery, arrived
    in the early 1800s and caused further division
    between the British and slave-owning Dutch.

12
And More Boer History
  • After Britain outlawed slavery, the Boers began a
    moving north and east of Capetown and formed two
    republicsthe Orange Free State and the Transvaal
    or ZAR.
  • This division led to the Boer Wars in the from
    the late 1880s-early 1900s, in which Britain
    emerges as the victor.

13
ApartheidSeparateness
  • 1948-1990Laws aimed at segregating races and
    maintaining strict control over
    non-whiteslegalized racial discrimination by
  • Prohibiting inter-racial marriages
  • Barring blacks from holding jobs classified as
    skilled labor, or almost all well-paying jobs
  • Mandating separate schools and hospitals
  • Restricting the movement of blacks through pass
    laws which required blacks to carry passes with
    ID and fingerprints
  • Restricted land ownership by blacks
  • Required all South Africans to register by race

14
Apartheid in the 50s and 60s
  • 1951government established reserves or
    homelands and assigned Africans to these
    homelands according to their tribe of origin.
    This stripped native blacks of their South
    African citizenship.
  • 1960sthe UN called for sanctions against the
    Republic of South Africa to protest apartheid and
    human rights but had little effect for three
    decades.
  • 1964--Nelson Mandela, the leader of the
    anti-Apartheid movement, was tried for treason
    and sentenced to life in prison.

15
End of Apartheid
  • 1976a peaceful march by Soweto schoolchildren
    turns deadly when police fire into the crowd,
    sparking rioting and international outrage.
  • 1980sinternational pressure mounted
  • 1990South Africa freed Mandela and began
    repealing apartheid laws
  • 1994blacks and mixed-race South Africans were
    allowed to vote, electing Mandela president. He
    served until 1999.
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