Colonial Travel Narrative to Present Transculturation and Hybridity in Nadine Gordimer’s July’s People
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الخطاب و التواصل
Abstract
Several South African intellectuals used their writings as powerful weapons against
the racial segregationist movement Apartheid that they judged unfair and inhumane. Nadine
Gordimer’s devotement to this scholarly struggle is basic in most of her novels, critical essays
and short stories. Despite historical context displayed in her works, this world-renowned
writer has kept her strong artistic individuality shown throughout her literary style. This paper
explores the way in which the relation between history and literature appears reflected in her
work July’s People (1981). In this work, Nadine Gordimer records the experiences of Black
South African migrants and the falsehood of the liberal bourgeois whites by refiguring
colonial travel narrative genre through the plot of Black revolt and White flight to the
homelands to offer a nuanced view of cultural exchanges occurring between Black and White
South Africans resulting in transculturation and hybridity between the two different sociocultural communities.
