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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12591
Title: ALTERING A LEGACY: REWRITING DEFOE IN J.M. COETZEE’S FOE
Authors: Bailey, Leigha K.
Advisor: Zuroski-Jenkins, Eugenia
Walmsley, Peter
Monture, Rick
Department: English and Cultural Studies
Keywords: Daniel Defoe;J. M. Coetzee;Foe;Friday;Robinson Crusoe;Susan Barton;Other English Language and Literature;Other English Language and Literature
Publication Date: Oct-2012
Abstract: <p>Much of the critical discourse on J.M. Coetzee’s <em>Foe</em> does not fully investigate its relationship with Daniel Defoe’s texts, despite <em>Foe</em>’s intimate relation with them. This thesis offers a postcolonial reading of Coetzee’s Susan Barton, Cruso and Friday against Daniel Defoe’s original characters Roxana, Robinson Crusoe and Friday. Chapter one discusses Roxana-as-feminist, female colonizer, representative of her sex and Amazon and compares her to Barton. It reveals the tendency of critical discourse to attempt to ‘know’ Barton as they ‘know’ Roxana, by categorizing her, and reveals how Coetzee’s character frustrates attempts to define her. The second chapter addresses eighteenth-century knowledge of race and how it differs from present day, which offers an alternate reading of <em>Robinson Crusoe</em> and complicates its use as a colonial handbook. I also discuss masculinity in Defoe’s <em>Robinson Crusoe</em> as an individual characteristic Coetzee alters into something that can be appropriated. His characters are not masculine but can wield phallic symbols such as the pen and the knife to reveal power as systemic rather than individualistic. The final chapter offers an in depth postcolonial reading of Friday and interrogates critical discourse’s tendency to read him as representative of ‘the colonized,’ or as a colonial trope.</p>
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12591
Identifier: opendissertations/7464
8504
3346752
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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