Reading affect in post-apartheid literature: Compassion and other difficult feelings in Ivan Vladislavić
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Date
2014-02-26
Authors
Schultz, Clea
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Abstract
I aim to explore compassion and affect in South African literature because there is a
remarkable dearth of criticism on both compassion and affect in this field. I hope this
thesis will be a small remedying contribution. As I wish to explore material conceptions
of compassion and affect, this study will also engage in commentary on everyday South
African society as reflected by the “web cracked mirror” (Titlestad and Gaylard, 7) held
up to it: its literature. My case study is Ivan Vladislavić because he is a writer intricately
engaged with everyday South African society, particularly the material realities and lived
experiences of the people living within it. He never uses the word “compassion” in his
texts, excepting in the mouth of Merle in The Restless Supermarket. (192) Nevertheless,
the way in which he chooses and portrays his subject matter is infused with compassion,
albeit in his aloof style. I have come to this conclusion through close reading of three of
his texts – The Restless Supermarket, The Exploded View and Portrait with Keys – and
intend to make close reading a large part of this thesis. I must also state this thesis will
be my own personal enquiry and research, not an empirical project. The nature of affect
is such that a study of affect must always be deeply subjective and, in fact, affected.