New

Turbott Wolfe

Regular price RM32.54 MYR
Unit price
per

Pioneering renegade colonialist critique; provocative, questioning.

If you gravitate towards books that were ahead of their times, igniting debates and challenging status quos, "Turbott Wolfe" might just resonate with you. William Plomer's narrative delves deep into the theme of racism with a boldness that was especially striking for its era. It's not just an engaging story about societal and racial tensions in 1920s South Africa, but a historical milestone that echoes the complexities of human relationships across color lines.

New

Turbott Wolfe

Regular price RM32.54 MYR
Unit price
per
ISBN: 9780949937698
Authors: William Plomer
Publisher: Ad. Donker
Date of Publication: 1980-01-01
Format: Hardcover
Related Collections: Historical Fiction, Drama, Literary Fiction
Goodreads rating: 3.46
(rated by 24 readers)

Description

"It is an inexplicable lapse on the part of literary scholars and critics," writes Nadine Gordimer in her Introduction, "that Turbott Wolfe is not recognised as a pyrotechnic presence in the canon of renegade colonialist literature along with Conrad." Indeed, William Plomer’s astonishing first novel, which first appeared in 1926, ignited a firestorm of controversy in his native South Africa. At the novel’s center is Turbott Wolfe, a British trader who opens a general store in Lembuland. He befriends many of his black customers but has less luck ingratiating himself with the bigoted whites who have lived in the area for generations. Eventually, Wolfe and his comrades embrace miscegenation as the key to Africa’s future—the Young Africa, where the races have blurred. Provocative and deeply questioning, Turbott Wolfe remains a powerful chronicle of the intimate human consequences of racism.
Condition guide
Availability
 
(0 in cart)

You may also like

Pioneering renegade colonialist critique; provocative, questioning.

If you gravitate towards books that were ahead of their times, igniting debates and challenging status quos, "Turbott Wolfe" might just resonate with you. William Plomer's narrative delves deep into the theme of racism with a boldness that was especially striking for its era. It's not just an engaging story about societal and racial tensions in 1920s South Africa, but a historical milestone that echoes the complexities of human relationships across color lines.