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  • Cilt: 10 Sayı: 3
  • Private Pain, Public Ruin: Corporeal Allegories of South African Apartheid in Age of Iron

Private Pain, Public Ruin: Corporeal Allegories of South African Apartheid in Age of Iron

Authors : İncihan Hotaman
Pages : 1646-1656
Doi:10.29110/soylemdergi.1776911
View : 50 | Download : 126
Publication Date : 2025-12-28
Article Type : Research Paper
Abstract :J. M. Coetzee’s Age of Iron presents a profound exploration of the interplay between private experience and public reality within apartheid-era South Africa. This paper argues that the novel situates Mrs. Elizabeth Curren’s personal suffering, her terminal illness, and her moral awakening as a microcosm of the broader social, political, and ethical collapse of the nation. Through the epistolary form, Coetzee provides a lens into Mrs. Curren’s growing awareness of the violent oppression endured by Black South Africans, highlighting the intersections of complicity, guilt, and the consequences of historical injustice. The novel’s meticulous depiction of her deteriorating body, her decaying home, and her limited interactions with figures such as Florence serves as an allegorical reflection of South Africa’s fragmented society and failing apartheid state. Mrs. Curren’s cancer functions as both a personal and cultural symbol, embodying the cumulative effects of shame and moral repression, while her experiences in the township of Guguletu reveal the stark contrast between mediated images of reality and lived oppression. By analyzing the novel’s layering of personal illness, ethical reflection, and socio-political critique, this paper demonstrates how Coetzee transforms large-scale historical violence into intimate, embodied experience. Ultimately, Age of Iron illuminates the inextricable connection between individual conscience and collective responsibility, illustrating how witnessing oppression entails both suffering and moral reckoning. The novel’s conclusion, which signals the emergence of a new identity rather than simply marking death, underscores the potential for ethical and personal renewal even amidst systemic collapse.
Keywords : Coetzee, Age of Iron, apartheid, mikrokozmos, ahlaki suç ortaklığı, bedensel acı

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