Imagery and Structure in Nadine Gordimer’s “Once upon a Time”

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Abstract

In Nadine Gordimer’s story “Once upon a Time” published originally in 1989, the white child caught in the barbed wire and then violently ripped free symbolises not only the death of white supremacy but also the birth of a new South African society. The multiple ironies of imagery and structure brilliantly clarify Gordimer’s inverted fairy tale of a Yeatsian “terrible beauty”.

 

 Opsomming

 Nadine Gordimer se verhaal "Once upon a Time" (oorpronklik gepubliseer in 1989) vertel van ’n wit kind wat in doringdraad verstrengel is en dan met geweld losgeskeur word. Dit simboliseer sowel die einde van wit oorheersing as die geboorte van ’n nuwe Suid-Afrikaanse bestel. Gordimer se omgekeerde feëverhaal oor ’n "verskriklike skoonheid" (wat aan Yeats herinner) word op ’n briljante wyse deur die veelvuldige ironieë van beeldspraak en struktuur belig.

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Author Biography

Michael Shurgot, South Puget Sound Community College

Michael W. Shurgot retired in June 2006 as Professor of Humanities at South Puget Sound Community College in Olympia, Washington, where he received four distinguished faculty awards. His publications include Stages of Play: Shakespeare's Theatrical Energies in Elizabethan Performance (University of Delaware Press, 1998); North American Players of Shakespeare: A Book of Interviews (Delaware, 2008); and numerous essays on medieval and renaissance English drama. He reviews Shakespearean productions in the Seattle area, as well as the Oregon Shakespeare Festival and the London Globe season, for The Upstart Crow and Shakespeare Bulletin. He has also published on Joyce and Steinbeck.

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Published

2008-09-01

How to Cite

Shurgot, Michael. 2008. “Imagery and Structure in Nadine Gordimer’s ‘Once Upon a Time’”. Journal of Literary Studies 24 (3):54-67. https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/jls/article/view/12585.

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Articles