“We are all souls”: Dogs, dog-wo/men and borderlands in Coetzee and Tyulkin
Examining the notion of “dog-men” in Coetzee’s Disgrace and Tyulkin’s documentary Not about Dogs, I argue that when the main characters become dog-men and dog-women they share with dogs the status of subaltern border-creatures. I view the spaces in the Eastern Cape and eastern Kazakhstan as borderla...
Main Author: | Henrietta Mondry |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | Afrikaans |
Published: |
Tydskrif vir Letterkunde Association
2018-08-01
|
Series: | Tydskrif vir Letterkunde |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://journals.assaf.org.za/index.php/tvl/article/view/5508 |
Similar Items
-
The borderland of civilizations as a research category in the sociology of borderland
by: Andrzej Sadowski
Published: (2009-06-01) -
Partitioned lives : the Irish borderlands /
by: Nash, Catherine., et al.
Published: (2013) -
Belarusian‐polish‐Lithuanian borderlands: Phenomenological analysis
by: Mikalai Biaspamiatnych
Published: (2008-12-01) -
Galician literary space through the prism of the concepts of borderland, Galician borderland and Galician literary borderland
by: Natalia Matorina
Published: (2023-08-01) -
Creativity for multiculturalism: the artistic and educational action for developing borderland identity
by: Małgorzata Bieńkowska
Published: (2021-11-01)