Original Article Resistance to Change: Exploring David Lurie’s Struggle with Aging and Social Shift in J.M Coetzee’s Disgrace
INTRODUCTION J.M. Coetzee's
novel Disgrace was published in 1999. The protagonist David Lurie is a
52 years old twice divorced professor. He is a character who can’t figure out
his status in a society that is going through a radical change. He is depicted
as a character who is stuck between a dying past and an incessantly critical
present. The novel, set against the backdrop of the transformation of South
Africa from apartheid to democracy, parallels Lurie’s personal downfall that is
characterized by growing old, losing respect, and having to change one's
lifestyle according to the new social conditions. He is living in a world where
power is being shared differently and where the very ground of his entitlement
is challenged. His relationships with women like Soraya, Melanie, and Lucy
testify to the fact that he still has a hard time letting go of power. Besides,
the moral landscape he occupies is as complex as the society he lives in.
Coetzee through Lurie’s narrative digs deeper into life, power, and
accountability, intertwining those themes with questions of justice and
injustice in a shifting society. Fixing on the
youth Lurie finds it extremely hard to face the reality of his old self. He
embarks on a ruthless fight against aging by resorting to his fixation on
youth. Lurie’s fixation on youth and desire revealed about his fear of
irrelevance. Women in Lurie’s life, such as
Soraya, Melanie, and Lucy, and his relationship with them were reflections of
his struggle with aging, which had made him a dominant figure in their lives.
Lurie’s obsession with youth, contempt for the new South Africa, and unstable
relations with women have pointed to the causes of his difficult adaptation,
which has resulted in isolation and moral vagueness. This non-acceptance of
change is what causes his crisis. Yet, his non-acceptance of change is not
simply a personal matter; it is indicative of a larger cultural inertia as
society is trying to come to terms with the abolishment of the entrenched
hierarchies of race, gender, and class. Studying Lurie’s resistance yields the
discovery of intricate links between age, power, and identity in a society that
is on the brink of transformation. Examining the
intersections of aging, gender, and race in Disgrace, this research
analyses David Lurie’s struggle with aging and shifting societal norms. Lurie’s
resistance to aging and social change is a reflection of larger societal
tensions. The way in which Coetzee uses Lurie’s relationships to underscore his
resistance to societal changes is one of the questions that this research
attempted to answer. By analysing Lurie’s confrontation with his aging self and
the changing moral standards, it can be said that Coetzee is questioning how
people and nations deal with continuity and rupture when the old power
structure has started to collapse. This research will consider Lurie’s battle
against old age and his denial of social transformation to show the painful,
sometimes brutal, process of giving up power, thus revealing both the personal
and the social cost of fighting against the inevitable change. A very important
question is how the resistance to change leads to Lurie’s isolation. The ways
in which Lurie’s sense of superiority inhibits his adjustment to the new South
Africa of the post-apartheid era are also examined. This research will also
cover Lurie’s ultimate change, and what it uncovers about forgiveness and
acceptance. The question of how Coetzee employs Lurie to challenge patriarchy
and racial power structures is also significant. RESEARCH METHODOLOGY The methodology
for this research will consist of an analytical study of J.M Coetzee’s Disgrace.
This research has a limited focus on the specific interplay of aging and social
resistance in Disgrace. The research is based on postcolonial theory and
existentialist ideas. Through the lens of Postcolonial theory, David Lurie’s
discomfort with changing power dynamics and his eventual resistance to change
are examined in this research. Existentialist ideas were also taken into
account to explore the ideas around aging and authenticity. This paper will
also examine the moral ambiguity of David Lurie, analysing how Coetzee uses
Lurie’s character to comment on the intersections of power, privilege, and
mortality in post-apartheid South Africa. STRUGGLE WITH AGING In J.M. Coetzee's
novel Disgrace, the protagonist, David Lurie, is a 52-year-old
professor. He perceives both his intellectual and physical strengths as
diminishing. His preoccupation with Romantic poetry and his self-perception as
a person of letters clashes with his growing irrelevance in a modern, practical
university of the day. The shifting politics of South Africa led to the
internal restructuring of the university, and Lurie undergoes demotion from a
professor of modern languages to an adjunct professor of communications, a
field he looks down upon. The narrative depicts this process as: Once a professor of modern languages, he has
been, since Classics and Modern Languages were closed down as part of the great
rationalization, adjunct professor of communications. Coetzee
(2000) The decline of his
career coincides with his physical aging and compounds his feeling of being
worthless in a transformative society. In this way David Lurie’s personal
decline is linked to his aging and loss of vitality. The novel
describes Lurie as a lover of women; it states: He himself has no son. His childhood was
spent in a family of women. As mother, aunts, sisters full away, they were
replaced in due course by mistresses, wives, a daughter. The company of women
made him a lover of women and, to an extent, a womanizer. Coetzee
(2000) A significant part
of Lurie's identity has always been built on his ability to effortlessly
attract women. With his height, his good bones, his olive
skin, his flowing hair, he could always count on a degree of magnetism. If he
looked at a woman in a certain way, with a certain intent, she would return his
look, he could rely on that. That was how he lived; for decades, that was the
backbone of his life. Coetzee
(2000) But with his
growing age, Lurie lost his power to attract women. Then one day it all ended. Without warning
his power fled. Glances that would once have responded to his slid over, past,
through him. Overnight he became a ghost. If he wanted a woman he had to learn
to pursue her; often, in one way or another, to pay her. Coetzee
(2000) Lurie eventually
developed a fear of losing sexual attractiveness and identity. As he ages (he
is 52 at the start of the novel), his physical magnetism fades, leading to a
profound identity crisis. His fear of becoming unattractive pushes him towards
increasingly desperate sexual encounters, initially with a prostitute like
Soraya, and later a student, Melanie Isaacs. He existed in an anxious flurry of
promiscuity. He had affairs with the wives of colleagues; he picked up tourists
in bars on the waterfront or at the Club Italia; he slept with whores. Coetzee
(2000) It is also crucial
to keep in consideration that Melanie and Soraya were women of colour. Lurie being sexually involved with women of
different races implies his desire to retain control as a White. Lurie’s fixation
on youth is a coping mechanism against mortality, highlighting his inability to
accept aging. Lurie once thought of castration so that he could shift his focus
from desire and physical pleasures towards the business of the old, as sexual
gratification is something that is most suited to the younger generations than
him. The novel states: He ought to give up, retire from the game. At
what age, he wonders, did Origen castrate himself? Not the most graceful of the
decks, at least, so that one can turn one’s mind to the proper business of the
old: preparing to die. Coetzee
(2000) Lurie’s thoughts
get deeper. He thinks of the process and how animals go through castration
almost every day. However, Lurie ends his thoughts by claiming “There is still
Soraya” Coetzee
(2000). Soraya could mean every other prostitute
who accepts to sleep with an old man for money. The novel starts
with the lines, “FOR A MAN of his age, fifty-two, divorced, he has, to his
mind, solved the problem of sex rather well” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie viewed sex as a ‘problem to be
solved’ and a way to exercise control and power, but these pursuits ultimately
leave him feeling empty and further alienated. His affair with Melanie is an
attempt to cling to his former virility but results in the scandal that costs
him his job and status. As a professor,
Lurie tried to take advantage of Melanie. Lurie believes that a woman’s beauty
is something to be shared. Lurie tells Melanie “…a woman’s beauty does not
belong to her alone. It is part of the bounty she brings into the world. She
has a duty to share it” Coetzee
(2000). However, he was aware of his age when he
was trying on Melanie. Lurie felt like a parent when he tried to make advances
towards her, “Melanie! He says, trying to keep his tone light. But he has
forgotten how to woo. The voice he hears belongs to a cajoling parent, not a
lover” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie forgetting how to woo someone’s
affection explains how his days of youth had long passed by. He feels his voice
appear like a parent rather than a lover when he was talking to Melanie. The
difference in age was felt by him. His morals were acting inside his head, but
his sexual desires were overpowering his morals. The lines describe Lurie’s
mental state, “A child! He thinks: No more than a child! What am I
doing? Yet his heart lurches with desire” Coetzee
(2000). However, Lurie’s mind was taken over by
desires. Desire for young women like Melanie underscores his insecurity for
aging. His sexual desires make him morally weak. On a visit to
Melanie’s flat one afternoon, Lurie makes sexual advances towards her. She
verbally says, “No, not now!” Coetzee
(2000). But he makes love to her. When it is over,
Melanie asked him to leave as her cousin Paulina will be back any minute. On
that day Lurie realises his mistake of engaging with a student as young as his
daughter. When Melanie asked him to leave: He obeys, but then, when he reaches his car,
is overtaken with such dejection, such dullness, that he sits slumped at the
wheel unable to move. A mistake, a huge mistake. At this moment, he has no
doubt, she Melanie, is trying to cleanse herself of it, of him. He sees her
running a bath, stepping into the water, wyes closed like a sleepwalker’s.
Coetzee
(2000) He feels invisible
to younger women and is forced to confront the idea that he is considered too
old to be sexually desirable, an awareness that his ex-wife Rosalind makes
painfully clear. Rosalind tells Lurie: You’re what – fifty -two? Do you think a
young girl finds any pleasure in going to bed with a man of that age? Do you
think she finds it good to watch you in the middle of your…? Do you ever think
about that? Coetzee
(2000) Lurie also
realises that Rosalind is right: …perhaps she has a point. Perhaps it is the
right of the young to be protected from the sight of their elders in the throes
of passion. That is what whores are for, after all: to put up with the
ecstasies of the unlovely. Coetzee
(2000) Lurie’s attempt
was however not termed as rape. The novel’s third person limited narration,
which reflected Lurie’s perspective, describes the encounter as “Not rape, not
quite that, but undesired nevertheless, undesired to the core” Coetzee
(2000). The lines implied Melanie’s passivity
rather than active consent. Lurie’s actions were characterised as an abuse of
power that amounts to sexual harassment and abuse. Lurie’s character
portrays the erosion of authority. When the mid-term test took place, Melanie
was not in the class, and he marked her as present and gave her a score of
seventy. His role as a teacher had enabled him to exercise his power over the
students’ future by granting them the grades. Lurie misuses his authority to
take physical advantages from a student. As a compensation he provided her with
attendance and marks for her un-attempted mid-term test. However, “At the foot
of the page he pencils a note to himself: ‘Provisional’. Seventy: a
vacillator’s mark, neither good nor bad” Coetzee
(2000). His footnote to himself is a way he
reassures himself that the grades he provided her were not very influential.
His morals were acting against him, which made him leave a footnote to himself
so that his mind could accept that he is not taking advantage of his authority.
Later Lurie came to know that Melanie wished to drop out of the university. Her
father, Mr. Isaacs, met Lurie asking for help. Mr Isaac tells him that she has
much respect for him as a professor, claiming that she would listen to his advice
if he told her not to drop out. Lurie ought to say, “Respect? You are out of
date, Mr Isaacs. Your daughter lost respect for me weeks ago, and with good reasons”
Coetzee
(2000). But he instead replied “I’ll see what I can
do…” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie was aware that he would be paying for
his actions this time. You will not get away with it,
he tells himself afterwards. Nor will father Isaacs in faraway George forget
this conversation, with its lies and evasions. I’ll see what I can do. Why
not come clean? I am the worm in the apple, he should have said. How
can I help you when I am the very source of your woe? Coetzee
(2000) Melanie eventually
lodged a formal complaint against Lurie. The notification that arrived at
Lurie’s office: …in an envelope marked Confidential –
is accompanied by a copy of the code. Article 3 deals with victimization or
harassment on grounds of race, ethnic group, religion, gender, sexual
preference, or physical disability. Coetzee
(2000) This situation
resulted in a university committee hearing at which Lurie was pronounced guilty
of sexual harassment and compelled to resign after he refused to express any
remorse or make any apologies. His dismissal for misconduct and his forced
resignation symbolises the collapse of his personal and professional identity.
Lurie, however, never felt guilty of his actions. During his hearing from the
committee that was established to provide a judgement against the complaint
that was registered against Lurie: He does not feel nervous. On the contrary, he
feels quite sure of himself. His heart beats evenly, he has slept well. Vanity,
he thinks, the dangerous vanity of the gambler; vanity and self-righteousness.
He is going into this in the wrong spirit. But he does not care. Coetzee
(2000) Lurie claims that,
“I have no fear of the committee. I have no fear of the observer” Coetzee
(2000). He was trying to make the committee realize
that his actions with Melanie were purely a result of his sexual impulses and
desire for pleasure. His identity is at stake, which makes him rationalize his
actions instead of transforming himself. His conduct is an expression of his
struggle against the shifting power relations in post-apartheid South Africa.
He is not ready to apologize in front of the committee that was supposed to
deliver justice to Black women. He tells the committee “I was not myself. I was
no longer a fifty-year-old divorced at a loose end. I became a servant of Eros”
Coetzee
(2000). Lurie pleaded guilty for following an
impulse he could not resist, not because he abused Melanie. One of the members
of the committee Farodia Rassool states that: Yes, he says, he is guilty; but when we try
to get specificity, all of a sudden it is not abuse of a young woman he is
confessing to, just an impulse he could not resist, with no mention of the pain
he has caused, no mention of the long history of exploitation of which this is
part. Coetzee
(2000) Rassool wanted to
bring into light the exploitation of Blacks by the Whites calling Lurie’s abuse
of Melanie a part of it. The committee wanted to make the trial fair and just
because the incident involved a White university professor who abused a Black student.
As the country is in transition from apartheid to democracy, the committee
wanted to set an example by punishing a White that in the new South Africa
there is equality. Melanie’s decision
to voice against Lurie made him lose his reputation. However, Lurie did not
accept that Melanie lodged the complaint herself. “Melanie would not have taken
such a step by herself, he is convinced. She is too innocent for that, too ignorant
of her power” Coetzee
(2000). He considers women nothing more than a
means to satisfy his desires, and as such, he completely ignores their
independence and power. Lurie's
perspective is that women exist merely for his pleasure, completely ignoring
their rights and ability to decide for themselves. His refusal to accept
his aging and the decline of his career leads to a situation where he defends
rather than changes his ways consistent with the new social order. He explains
his conduct by shifting blame onto others for his bad luck and not accepting
his part in the incident. He explains to Lucy, his daughter, how he was offered
a compromise, but he wouldn’t accept. The compromise was “Re-education.
Reformation of the character. The code-word was counselling” Coetzee
(2000). When Lucy questioned him “And are you so
perfect that you can’t do with a little counselling?” Coetzee
(2000). He replied to Lucy that he can simply
choose death rather than apologising for his deeds. He says: It reminds me too much of Mao’s China.
Recantation, self-criticism, public apology. I’m old-fashioned, I would prefer
simply to put against a wall and shot. Have done with it. Coetzee
(2000) Lucy tells Lurie
that the affair between teacher’s and student had been going on for a long time
and was quite normal until recent times, “It certainly went on when I was a
student. If they prosecuted every case the profession would be decimated” Coetzee
(2000). But Lurie replies that, “These are
puritanical times. Private life is public business” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie’s lines explain how the
post-apartheid society is trying to bring personal matters into public spheres,
if it involves individuals with both the races. He called the post-apartheid
society as ‘puritanical’. Puritanical because like the puritanical times the
post-apartheid society is having a very strict attitude towards moral or social
issues. The novel shows the backdrop of post-apartheid period. It portrays how
Whites were treated during post-apartheid times. Lurie’s incident with Melanie
was something that is common in every educational institution. But because
Lurie was White, the university punished him. They wanted to record that a
White person has been punished duly, and the university does not discriminate
on races. When Lurie visited
his daughter Lucy’s farm, he came across the realisation that he is growing
old. It was when Lucy tried to convince Lurie to let go of the past as he had
paid the price for everything that had associated him with Melanie. She tells
Lurie that Melanie won’t think too harshly of him. She believes that “women can
be surprisingly forgiving” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie thinks, “Is Lucy, his child,
presuming to tell him about women?” Coetzee
(2000). His daughter, whom once upon a time he used
to drive to school and ballet class, to the circus and the skating rink, is
taking him on an outing, showing him life, showing him this other, unfamiliar
world. Coetzee
(2000) Lucy’s farm is
like a new adventure to him. When he was living with Lucy, he tried not to act
as a parent. He urges himself to adopt habits or make preparations that will
lead to a better life when he is old. He has stayed with his daughter only for
brief periods before. Now he is sharing her house, her life. He has to be
careful not to allow old habits to creep back, the habits of a parent: putting
the toilet roll on the spool, switching off lights, chasing the cat off the
sofa. Practice for old age, he admonishes himself. Practice fitting in.
Practice for the old folks’ home. Coetzee
(2000) Lucy tried to know
the actual case that had happened with her father Lurie and his university
student Melanie, as she had partial knowledge of the incident from Lurie’s
second ex-wife Rosalind. She was also curious why Lurie did not try to defend
himself. Lurie tells her his reason for not defending himself. He says, “The
case you want me to make is a case that can no longer be made, basta.
Not in our day. If I tried to make it I would not be
heard” Coetzee
(2000). What Lurie meant is that, in the new South
Africa, in post-apartheid times the agony of White was ignored. If Lurie had
tried to justify his actions, there would have been no one to hear him. Lucy,
however, is determined to hear Lurie’s story; she says, “Even if you are what
you say, a moral dinosaur, there is a curiosity to hear the dinosaur speak. I
for one am curious. What is your case? Let us hear it” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie tells Lucy that “My case rests on the
rights of desire…. I was a servant of Eros: that is what he wants to
say, … It was god who acted through me” Coetzee
(2000). Eros was the Greek god of love, desire,
passion, and procreation. Lurie tried to justify that his action was a result
of desire and passion, and to him there is no moral attached when someone acts
out of sexual impulses. He gives an example of a dog to justify himself
further. He says: One can punish a dog, it seems to me, for an
offense like chewing a slipper. A dog will accept the justice of that: a
beating for a chewing. But desire is another story. No animal will accept the
justice of being punished for following its instincts. Coetzee
(2000) Lucy questions,
“So males must be allowed to follow their instincts unchecked? Is that the
moral?” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie replies that: No, that is not the moral. What was ignoble
about the Kenilworth spectacle was that poor dog had begun to hate its own
nature. It no longer needed to be beaten. It was ready to punish itself. At
that point it would have been better to shoot it. Coetzee
(2000) What Lurie meant
is that he had started to hate his own nature. He does not need any punishment
for acting on his desires. He is ready to punish himself. With the phrase
‘better to shoot it’, Lurie tried to imply that when an individual starts
hating oneself for one’s actions, it is better to end such life. Perhaps he
might have realised his moral degradation and physical aging. Lucy, however,
provides another option for such a degraded state of life; she says “…have it
fixed” Coetzee
(2000). But Lurie does not want to change himself;
instead, he preferred being shot. He says “Perhaps. But at the deepest level I
think it might have preferred being shot” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie’s age acts as a barrier to adapting
to new social norms. In the course of
the novel, Lucy’s rape acted as the major event that made David Lurie realise
his growing age. After her rape, the way Lucy treated Lurie made him come
across a thought that told him that his daughter had grown up. He notices that
“…for the second time in a day she spoke to him as if to a child – a child or
an old man” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie was, however, severely hurt by the
robbers who raped Lucy. He went into a state of shock and his body felt weak
and trembling. “For the first time he has a taste of what it will be like to be
an old man, tired to the bone, without hopes, without desires, indifferent to
the future” Coetzee
(2000). He tries to regain control over his mind
and body but deep inside he had already given up. “His pleasure in living has
been snuffed out. Like a leaf on a steam, like a puffball on a breeze, he has
begun to float towards his end” Coetzee
(2000). While living with
Lucy, Lurie came across Bev Shaw. Bev is a Black woman who is Lucy’s friend.
She runs a local animal clinic near Lucy’s farm, where she provides care for
sick, abandoned, and unwanted animals. After spending much of his time at
Lucy’s farm and working at the animal clinic, Lurie gets close to Bev Shaw. He
sleeps with her. When he was lying beside her, he thought: Let me not forget this day, he tells himself,
lying beside her when they are spent. After the sweet young flesh of Melanie
Isaacs, this is what I have come to. This is what I will have to get used to,
this and even less than this. Coetzee
(2000) This thought
reflected how Lurie had accepted his degraded state in life. He had accepted
that he had grown old and therefore he was unappealing to younger and beautiful
women. He believes that now he can only attract women like Bev Shaw who are
unappealing according to him. When Lurie met
Rosalind after he returned to Cape Town, she took a dig at his current state of
life. She tells him “You are going to end up as one of those sad old men who
poke around in rubbish bins” Coetzee
(2000). To this Lurie replied that “I’m going to
end up in a hole in the ground… and so are you. So are we all” Coetzee
(2000). With his reply, Lurie meant that everyone
ends up being buried in the ground. Everyone has one destination, one end i.e.
death. Whatever goes through in life, the end remains the same for every human. Lurie remorse’s
his actions after realising what he did with Melanie was his mistake. He
believes that the trial that was held against him was set up to punish him
because: If the old men hog the young women, what will
be the future of the species? That, at bottom, was the case for the
prosecution. Half of literature is about it: your women struggling to escape
from under the weight of old man, for the sake of the species. Coetzee
(2000) At this point
Lurie accepted his aging self. “He sighs. The young in one another’s arms,
heedless, engrossed in the sensual music. No country, this, for old men” Coetzee
(2000). He regretted his past actions as he
realised that there is no place for the old men. No sensual pleasure, no
desires; the old men only wait for death to come. Lurie’s struggle with aging
and dis-satisfaction with the social shift is manifesting as a crisis of
identity and power in the post-apartheid South Africa. When Lurie
returned to Lucy’s farm after spending some time at Cape Town, he came to know
that Lucy is pregnant. He questioned Lucy, “Do you love him yet?” Coetzee
(2000). He meant the child in her womb. A child of
an unknown father who had a different race. Lucy replied that her love for the
child would grow. She tells him “I am determined to be a good mother, David. A
good mother and a good person. You should try to be a good person too” Coetzee
(2000). What Lucy meant is that, she wants to love
her child unconditionally even though the child will not carry a pure White
lineage. She wants to be a good person who believes in equality of all races
and wants Lurie to adapt the same. Lurie replied “I suspect it is too late for
me. I’m just an old lag serving out my sentence. But you go ahead. You are well
on the way” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie believes that he is already old and
does not have much time to change himself. He had accepted his growing self in
a way that demotivated him. Lurie’s resistance to accept social change is one
of the central ways Coetzee critiques the old South African order. His
inability to evolve reflects a broader societal struggle — those unwilling to
let go of privilege and tradition are left alienated and morally bankrupt.
Lurie thoughts go back to Lucy: So: once she was only a little tadpole in her
mother’s body, and now here she is, solid in her existence, more solid than he
has ever been. With luck she will last a long time, long beyond him. When he is
dead she will, with luck, still be here doing her
ordinary tasks among the flowerbeds. And from within her will have issued
another existence, that with luck will be just as solid, just as long-lasting. So it will go on, a line of existences in which his share,
his gift, will grow inexorably less and less, till it may as well be forgotten.
Coetzee
(2000) The lines express
how Lurie views the process of life. Through his thoughts he somewhere
questions his own existence. Lurie had sexual
obsession, which made his struggle with aging a central theme. His gradual
decline corresponds with the massive societal transformations; thus, his
individual deterioration is a mirror to the political alterations in the bigger
context. Lurie’s aging body is a symbol which represents the decay of old South
Africa—stubborn, resistant, and unable to adapt. His eventual shift in
personality when he worked for abandoned dogs symbolised the growing acceptance
in a new South Africa which is based on empathy, acceptance, and equality. RESISTENCE TO SOCIAL CHANGE David Lurie is a
representative of the crisis of a post-apartheid South Africa that is trying to
transform. Lurie still holds to the old views of privilege, gender, authority,
and race and does not want to change to the new moral and social order built on
the post-apartheid values of equality and accountability. He sees himself as
the sole authority and any opposition to this is a danger to his existence. Lurie's behaviour
towards women, especially Melanie and his daughter Lucy, is a manifestation of
his patriarchal and repressive views. Lurie looked down on Lucy and her life
choices as she chose the country life rather than the city. The third person
narrative of the novel put it as: Dogs
and a gun; breads in the oven and a crop in the earth. Curious that he and her
mother, cityfolk, intellectuals, should have produced
this throwback, this sturdy young settler. Coetzee
(2000) Lurie’s treatment
of Lucy reflects his discomfort with her choices. This resistance to accept
Lucy’s way of life manifests as oppressive behaviour, particularly towards
women and those he perceives as inferior. Lurie’s patriarchal attitude is
evident as he says: One wants to leave something behind. Or at
least a man wants to leave something behind. It’s easier for a woman…Easier, I
mean, to produce something with a life of its own. Coetzee
(2000) Lurie wanted to leave something behind after
him, something to this world when he himself is not physically present. That is
why he chose to write an opera called ‘Byron in Italy’ based on the last years
of the famous poet Byron. However, he felt that it was easier for women to
leave something to this world. Easier because they could produce children. His
belief presents the idea that women’s contribution to this society could only
be their children, and nothing else that is intellectual. He tells Lucy that,
“being a father is a rather abstract business” Coetzee
(2000). However, while
living in Lucy’s farm, Lurie soon realises that his daughter is moving away
from his parental control. She is living independently. And to an extent Lurie
felt that this change in Lucy was good. As a child Lucy had been quite and
self-effacing but never, as far as he knew, judging him. Now, in her middle
twenties, she has begun to separate. The dogs, the gardening, the astrology
books, the asexual clothes: in each he recognizes a statement of independence,
considered, purposeful. The turn away from men too. Making her own life. Coming
out of his shadow. Good! He approves! Coetzee
(2000) Lurie also
possesses a racial attitude. Lurie, to some extent, does not want to face his
racial biases directly, but through his relations with the Black people, he
shows his discomfort with the White privilege that has been abolished. For him,
the transition of power dynamics breeds insecurity about his position and
dominance. Lurie’s dealings with Petrus, a Black dog man, expose his unease
over the reshaping of race relations in South Africa. Over the course of
the novel, Lucy was raped and her house was robbed by three Blacks: two Black
men and a Black boy. They even killed her dogs. Lucy’s incident presents a
picture of post-apartheid South Africa where Blacks were taking control over.
They were committing crimes with the justification that they were providing
equality. Lurie finds it hard to save his daughter from the hands of the
imposter, who initially told Lucy that they wanted to make a phone call and
entered her premises. On the day when
Lucy was raped at the farm, Lurie felt helpless. When one of the men asked for
his keys, Lurie says, “Take them, … Take everything. Just leave my daughter
alone” Coetzee
(2000). He just wanted to save his daughter from
the hands of the men. “He speaks Italian, he speaks French, but Italian and
French will not save him here in darkest Africa” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie’s intellectual knowledge will not
help him in a place where people were desperate to settle their scores with the
Whites. The third person narrative calls it ‘darkest Africa’. The ‘darkness’
implied both the darkness of skin and the darkness of civilization as it
further states, “Mission work: what has it left behind, that huge enterprise of
upliftment? Nothing that he can see” Coetzee
(2000). The lines directly question the civilizing
mission of the Christian missionary. The Whites considered it a mission, a
great enterprise of upliftment, to civilize the dark continent i.e. Africa but
the state that South Africa holds during post-apartheid made the works of the
missionary questionable. After the incident Lurie tries to console himself: It happens every day, every hour, every
minute, he tells himself, in every quarter of the country. Count yourself lucky
to have escaped with your life. Count yourself lucky not to be a prisoner in
the car at this moment, speeding away, or at the bottom of a donga with a
bullet in your head. Count Lucy lucky too. Above all Lucy. Coetzee
(2000) Lurie’s thoughts
portray a deeper picture of the lives in South Africa. The amount of violence
the country is experiencing, Lurie feels he is fortunate that his life is
spared. He is not made captive and his daughter Lucy is also safe. Lurie
further thinks: A risk
to own anything: a car, a pair of shoes, a packet of cigarettes. Not enough to
go around, not enough cars, shoes, cigarettes. Too many people, too few things.
What there is must go into circulation, so that everyone can have a chance to
be happy for a day. That is the theory; hold to the theory and to the comforts
of theory. Not human evil, just a vast circulatory system, to whose working
pity and terror are irrelevant. This is how one must see life in this country:
in its schematic aspect. Otherwise one could go mad.
Cars, shoes; women too. There must be some niche in the system for women and
what happens to them. Coetzee
(2000) The lines give an
explanation of how things were running in South Africa during post-apartheid
times. There were not enough resources and the Black felt the need to revolt
against Whites and snatch away every luxury they possessed. Everything seems a
luxury during those times, be it a car, a pair of shoes, or a packet of
cigarettes. The Black, or the natives of South Africa had made a circulatory
system. They believed that everything should be circulated and everyone should
have access to everything and be happy. It has developed as a theory, and they
were acting according to it. They did not consider it as an evil to snatch away
or rob anyone else’s possession; for them, it is just part of a larger
circulation process. Lurie tries to convince himself that in South Africa it is
the new normal; one must see life in this county in this way. One has to accept
this circulation process and the evil that it encompasses; otherwise, they will
go mad. But the major issue that Lurie’s thoughts point out is about women and
their lives. Like cars and shoes, women also became part of the greater
circulation process, particularly White women like Lucy. After Lucy’s
incident her neighbour Ettinger tells Lurie that, “The best is, you save
yourself, because the police are not going to save you, not any
more, you can be sure” Coetzee
(2000). He is another White man living in the same
neighbourhood as Lucy. He warns Lurie to save himself on his own, as in this
new South Africa the power had now shifted to the Blacks. Those that have lived
all their lives under Whites oppression had finally got their hands on power.
The police are also not going to save the Whites if any of the crimes upon them
involve a Black native South African. Lurie later tried to convince Lucy to
give up on the farm. His interaction with his daughter also reflects his controlling
behaviour. He tried to have an idea about Lucy’s further plans as her farm was
not safe for her anymore. But Lucy had made up her mind to continue her life on
the farm itself. Her regular life. On that day Lurie realised that Lucy is “Not
her father’s little girl, not any longer” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie once felt
that whatever had happened to him and Lucy should be kept a secret. Otherwise,
people would point a finger; they would be a topic of gossip. He tells himself
“Lucy’s secret; his disgrace” Coetzee
(2000). The incident was Lucy’s secret, but it was
also Lurie’s disgrace because he could not save his daughter from her plight.
Lurie’s thoughts turn towards those three imposters who raped Lucy. The men will watch the newspaper, listen to
the gossip. They will read that they are being sought for robbery and assault
and nothing else. It will dawn on them that over the body of the woman silence
is being drawn like a blanket. Too ashamed, they will say to each other,
too ashamed to tell, and they will chuckle luxuriously, recollecting
their exploit. Coetzee
(2000) The imposters will
chuckle because they will feel that their deeds were concealed. Silence is
drawn like a blanket over Lucy’s body.
They will feel a victory because the woman they raped was too ashamed
to voice her assault. Moreover, after her incident Lucy had lost her
confidence: Because of her disgrace. Because of her
shame. That is what their visitors have achieved; that is what they have done
to this confident, modern young woman. Like a stain the story is spreading
across the district. Not her story to spread but theirs: they are its owners.
How they put her in her place, how they showed her what a woman was for. Coetzee
(2000) The third person
narrative called Lucy a visitor. A visitor in the country of Blacks, not a
native. It points out how the situation in South Africa had turned a confident
modern young woman into someone timid and submissive. Lucy’s story had spread
across the district, but it is not exactly her story. The owner of the story is
the Black rebels who believed that they were serving equality by working
through violence. They showed that they had put a White woman in her place who
was living independently on her own farm. Her place where she is underconfident
and submissive to men. They have shown her that a woman was for man’s pleasure,
not living independently on her own terms. Lucy’s rape and her disgrace had
painted a broader picture of how women are objectified. Lucy’s distress
after the incident is unmatched with Lurie’s. She is completely shattered. Her
mind is rather tormented by the thought of their being such hostility against
her; a hostility that was so personal. ‘It was so personal,’ she says. ‘It was done
with such personal hatred. That was what stunned me more than anything. The
rest was … expected. But why did they hate me so? I had never set eyes on
them’. Coetzee
(2000) Lucy struggles to
comprehend the reason behind their extreme aversion towards her and at the same
time, she tries to reason how that could ever happen, given the fact that they
haven't even met. She never exerted any effort in trying to be more powerful,
controlling, or oppressive than them. Lurie provides her with an answer. He
tells her: ‘It was history speaking through them,’… ‘A
history of wrong. Think of it that way, if it helps. It may have seemed
personal, but it wasn’t. It came down from the ancestors’. Coetzee
(2000) Lucy’s incident
was a reaction initiated by the history of injustice. It was the history of
suffering that had made the natives of South Africa hate the White population.
The actions of the imposters were a desire for revenge that came down from
their ancestors. Lucy tells Lurie that she feels the imposters will come back
for her. She says, “I think I am in their territory. They have marked me. They
will come back for me” Coetzee
(2000). The lines express how alienated Lucy feels
on her own farm. The line gives an
impression of a jungle with fixed territories. If anyone tries to settle
themselves in a marked territory of someone else, they will be uprooted. When
Lurie suggested that it is better to leave the farm for her own safety, she
tried to explain Lurie her way of looking into the matter. She tells him: But isn’t
there another way of looking at it, David? What if … what if that is the
price one has to pay for staying on? Perhaps that is how they look at it;
perhaps that is how I should look at it too. They see me as owing something.
They see themselves as debt collectors, tax collectors. Why should I be allowed
to live here without paying? Perhaps that is what they tell themselves. Coetzee
(2000) For Lucy the incident that happened with her was the
price for living in someone else’s country. According to her, native Blacks of
South Africa felt that she owed something to them and saw themselves as debt
collectors. The debt might be of all the years of living freely in a foreign
land with all the power and luxury while making the natives their slaves. And in the post-apartheid times, when the
natives had finally found freedom and power in their own land, they wanted the
foreign settlers to pay for staying. Nevertheless, Lurie’s perspective differed
from that of Lucy. Lucy sympathises with the natives. She tries to understand
their point of view for committing crimes in the name of justice. Lurie on the other hand tries to blame the
nature of Blacks. He tells Lucy, “I am sure they tell themselves many things.
It is in their interest to make up stories to justify them. But trust your
feelings. You said you felt only hatred from them” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie’s
attitude defines how he does not want to recognise all the years of suffering
of the Black race. Lucy, however,
never wanted to lodge a complaint for her rape. She reported to the police only
about robbery. But it was Lurie who tried to convince Lucy to lodge a complaint
against the three imposters on the charges of rape. He tells her: ‘Lucy, my dearest, why don’t you want to
tell? It was a crime. There is no shame in being the object of a crime. You did
not choose to be the object. You are an innocent party’. Coetzee
(2000) Lurie’s assault on
Melanie is crucial here. Lurie has never accepted that Melanie had lodged the
complaint against him. He felt that she was too ignorant of her power. He
believed that Melanie was made to do it either by her father Mr. Issac, her
boyfriend Ryan, or her cousin Pulina. But on the other hand, Lurie wants his
daughter to have the courage to voice against her rape. Lurie, being Lucy’s
father, encourages her to voice against injustice. In Lurie, we can find a
sense of hypocrisy. He finds Mr. Isaac being the reason for Melanie to lodge a
complaint against him. But he himself tries to make his daughter lodge a
complaint against her injustice. Nevertheless, Lurie realises his fault in
Melanie’s case. He questions Lucy, “Can I guess? he says. Are you trying to
remind me of something? …. Of what women undergo at the hands of men” Coetzee
(2000). The lives of women which are surrounded by
men; men who always try to seek physical pleasure from their bodies. And how
women’s lives are full of fear and uncertainty in the hands of men. Lucy eventually
expresses her reason for not reporting her rape to the police. She tells Lurie:
The reason is that, as far as I am concerned,
what happened to me is a purely private matter. In another time, in another
place it might be held to be a public matter. But in this place, at this time,
it is not. It is my business, mine alone…. This place being South Africa. Coetzee
(2000) By considering her
matter as private, Lucy tried to stress the fact that she is a White woman
living alone on a farm in South Africa. What had happened to her is private
because the same incident of rape would not have been committed to a woman who
is a Black, native of South Africa. During the time of transition from
apartheid to democracy, the landscape and power structure in South Africa are
constantly in change. In this period, any violence committed against the Whites
is not considered a crime because of their long history of dominance and
oppression of the Blacks. Lucy tells Lurie that if her incident had taken place
in another time, it could have been a public matter. And the incident could
have been considered a crime. But in South Africa during post-apartheid, her
incident was a private matter. It is not
something that anyone would give much importance to. In Lurie’s own case, he
considered his affair with Melanie a purely private matter. But he refused to justify
himself because he believed that in the post-apartheid times the private
matters were made public. There is a contrast in Lurie’s and Lucy’s cases.
Because Lurie was White, his incident with Melanie received widespread
attention and he had to lose his job in the name of justice. Even though his
crime was not as severe as those imposters who raped Lucy and robbed her house.
Nevertheless,
Lurie does not give up on Lucy. He tries to make her understand that her
suffering won’t erase out the years of injustice of the Blacks in the hands of
Whites. He tells her, “That is not how vengeance works, Lucy. Vengeance is like
a fire. The more it devours, the hungrier it gets” Coetzee
(2000). Vengeance is exactly the same thing as the
desire of revenge. Just like fire, it spreads and never ends; on the contrary,
it becomes more and more greedy and stronger as time goes by. Lurie questions
Lucy “Is it some form of private salvation you are trying to work out? Do you
hope you can expiate the crimes of the past by suffering in the present?” Coetzee
(2000). By ‘crimes of the past’, Lurie meant all
the injustice, domination and power struggles. It counts from forced settlement
to slavery. Lurie’s discomfort
with post-apartheid shifts reflects a broader resistance to loss of traditional
power. It is evident through Lurie’s conflict with Petrus. When Lurie first met
Petrus at Lucy’s farm, he introduces himself as “I am the gardener and the dog-man” Coetzee
(2000). When Lurie was watching soccer on the
television, he did not understand a word because the commentary was made in
native South African language. The commentary alternates between Sotho and
Xhosa, language of which he understands not a word. He turns the sound down to
a murmur. Saturday afternoon in South Africa: a time consecrated to men and
their pleasures. He nods off. Coetzee
(2000) Saturday afternoon
is a day of relaxation and men spend the evening watching soccer. But to a
White person like Lurie, the Saturday afternoon is no longer an evening to
relax and watch soccer. It is because in new South Africa, during
post-apartheid circumstances, the television commentaries were made in the
native language. Whites like Lurie do not understand a word, and so they chose
to turn down the volume. “When he wakes, Petrus is beside him on the sofa with
a bottle of beer in his hand. He has turned the volume higher” Coetzee
(2000). Petrus, being a Black and a native of South
Africa, understands the language of commentary very well. He sits on the sofa
with a bottle of beer in his hand, all ready to enjoy his Saturday evening.
During post-apartheid times, the lives of Blacks were improving. Their language
was getting recognition and they were not forced into slavery. After Lucy’s rape,
Lurie’s suspicion on Petrus grows. Lurie felt a connection between Lucy’s rape
and Petrus’s involvement. Lurie, however, realised that he cannot dismiss
Petrus on the grounds of suspicion. He sells his labour under contract, unwritten
contract, and that contract makes no provision for dismissal on grounds of
suspicion. It is a new world they live in, he and Lucy and Petrus. Coetzee
(2000) Petrus was not
Lucy’s slave. He offered his help on Lucy’s farm, perhaps he is just a hired
labourer. If there is a contract between Lucy and Petrus, it was unwritten.
Therefore, there is no ground to dismiss him. Lurie had to prove himself if he
wished to blame a Black man for any involvement with crime. He cannot dismiss
him simply because he grew suspicious of him.
For Lurie: He would not mind hearing Petrus’s story one
day. But preferably not reduced to English. More and more he is convinced that
English is an unfit medium for the truth of South Africa. Coetzee
(2000) English not being
a native language would not present the truth of South Africa. To hear the
stories of natives like Petrus, English is surely not the exact medium. English
will not hold the true essence of South Africa. When Lurie was
working with Petrus at the farm, he tried to bring up the event of the day when
the imposters arrived at their farm. He tried to tell Petrus how desperately he
wanted the men to be punished. He says, “I am Lucy’s father. I want those men to
be caught and bought before the law and punished. Am I wrong? Am I wrong to
want justice?” Coetzee
(2000). Lucy’s incident made Lurie realise the
feeling of a parent when their child goes through suffering and injustice.
Lucy’s incident makes Lurie and Mr. Isaac the co-passengers of the same boat, a
boat with a destination to their child’s justice. When Bev Shaw tried to
comfort Lurie by telling him that he should leave his daughter to live her life
on her own terms, Lurie tells her: I let go of Lucy long ago. I have been the
least protective of fathers. But the present situation is different. Lucy is
objectively in danger. We have had that demonstrated to us. Coetzee
(2000) With Lucy’s
incident, Lurie realised the importance of the father figure in his daughter’s
life. In the new South Africa, Lucy is in danger because she is a White. That
is why Lurie wanted to be a protective father; protect his daughter from all
evils. “Despite Bev’s counsel, despite Petrus’s assurances, despite Lucy’s
obstinacy, he is not prepared to abandon his daughter” Coetzee
(2000). He expresses himself to Bev Shaw. He tells
her, “Lucy says I can’t go on being a father for ever. I can’t imagine, in this
life, not being Lucy’s father” Coetzee
(2000). When Lurie
encountered the same young boy who raped Lucy at Petrus’s party, he wanted to
call the police and hand him over for interrogation of a crime which is much
severer than just robbery. But Lucy was head strong not to report the crime.
She had accepted her fate in the new South Africa. Lurie, however, constantly
tries to change her mind: Lucy, Lucy, I plead with you! You want to
make up for the wrongs of the past, but this is not the way to do it. If you
fail to stand up for yourself at this moment, you will never be able to hold
your head up again. Coetzee
(2000) Lurie had not
accepted the social shift of the time. He strongly believed that his voice
would be heard. Lucy’s acceptance of the new times is evident from Petrus’s
statement as he tells Lurie, “The new pipe will have to cross Lucy’s land … it
is good that she has given her permission. She is ‘forward looking’. ‘She is a
forward-looking lady, not backward-looking’” Coetzee
(2000). According to Petrus, Lucy is forward
looking because she has accepted her fate. She does not want to be an enemy
with Blacks; she accepts whatever is asked of her. She is not ‘backward
looking’ in the sense that she does not try to hold on to her former power. After living with
Lucy for a long time, Lurie decides to return to Cape Town. He went to his
house that was located close to the university. Upon putting his foot in the
house, he noticed that his house had been robbed. Nearly nothing was left. No ordinary burglary. A raiding party moving
in, cleaning out the site, retreating laden with bags, boxes, suitcases. Booty;
war reparations; another incident in the great campaign of redistribution. Coetzee
(2000) In Cape Town, he
went to the Dock Theatre where Melanie’s play was being staged. While he was
watching the play, seated with the crowd, “Though they are his countrymen, he
could not feel more alien among them, more of an imposter” Coetzee
(2000). It was because even though he was a White,
he had a history with Melanie but still he is there watching her play. In the
Dock Theatre, Lurie met Ryan, Melanie’s boyfriend. He tells Lurie “Stay with
your own kind” Coetzee
(2000). The line is ambiguous. On the surface, Ryan
was telling Lurie to stay with his own kind, with people of his own age.
However, the line somewhere also meant that Ryan was warning Lurie to stay with
his own race. To not get involved with the Blacks. Lurie returned to
Lucy’s farm after living in Cape Town for a while. On his return, he found out
that Lucy was expecting a baby with one of the intruders. Lurie did not
understand what Lucy wanted. He thought that Lucy had already taken care of the
situation when she was raped. Nevertheless, Lucy tells Lurie how she wants to
deal with her life. David, I can’t run my life according to
whether or not you like what I do. Not anymore. You behave as if everything I
do is part of the story of your life. You are the main character,
I am a minor character who doesn’t make an appearance until halfway through.
Well, contrary to what you think, people are not divided into major and minor.
I am not minor. I have a life of my own, just as important to me as yours is to
you, and in my life I am the one who makes the
decisions. Coetzee
(2000) She makes it clear
that she can take care of her life on her own. She does not need Lurie to make
decisions for her life. Lurie replies “Very well. This has come as a shock to
me, I confess but I will stand by you, whatever you decide. There is no question
about that” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie never expected such a confession from
his daughter. But as a father he decides to support her decision. His reply to
Lucy resembles a father’s unconditional support for his daughter. Even though Lurie
told Lucy that he would support her in her decision, he could not accept the
fact that his bloodline got tainted. The third person narrative presented the
thoughts of David Lurie, “A father without the sense to have a son: is this how
it is all going to end, is this how his line is going to run out, like water
dribbling into the earth?” Coetzee
(2000). If Lurie ever had a son, his bloodline
would have continued. But now that he has a daughter who will give birth to a
child conceived from an African man, Lurie felt devastated. Lurie’s thoughts
possess a racial attitude. His concern for his bloodline arises from the fact
that the child Lucy will give birth to will be a mixed race. The child will not
have a pure White lineage. “Standing against the wall outside the kitchen,
hiding his face in his hands, he heaves and heaves and finally cries” Coetzee
(2000). The presented David Lurie’s emotional
breakdown. After going through immense experiences of suffering, Lurie finally
releases his emotions through tears. Towards the end of
the novel, we came to know that Petrus had built his new residence near Lucy’s
farm. And the young boy who raped Lucy was also living with Petrus’s family.
Petrus claimed that the young boy was a brother of his wife. Lucy tells Lurie that
“I suspect there is something wrong with him. But I can’t order him off the
property, it’s not in my power” Coetzee
(2000). Lucy’s line indicated the loss of power of
the Whites. In the new times, the Blacks possess their rights and law protects
them. Later, Lucy told Lurie that Petrus offered to marry her. However, she
tells him that, “In any event, it is not me he is after, he is after the farm.
The farm is my dowry” Coetzee
(2000). Lucy already knows what Petrus intended,
but she does not wish to go against it. She tries to accept whatever comes her
way. Lucy adds: Petrus is not offering me a church wedding
followed by a honeymoon on the Wild Coast. He is offering an alliance, a deal.
I contribute the land, in return for which I am allowed to creep in under his
wing. Otherwise, he wants to remind me, I am without protection, I am fair
game. Coetzee
(2000) By marrying Lucy,
he will gain control over her land, and in return she will live a safe life by
being his wife. In the new South Africa, there is no safety for the Whites. But
after getting married to a native, Lucy can live a safe life. She will receive
his protection and her identity will become associated with him. Lurie does not
accept the offer for marriage. He wholeheartedly rejects it. But Lucy tries to
objectively explain her situation in a place like South Africa. She tells Lurie
“Objectively I am a woman alone. I have no brothers. I have a father, but he is
far away and anyhow powerless in the terms that matter here” Coetzee
(2000). Her lines explain her powerlessness. She is
in a state of vulnerability in a place like South Africa. She has no power, no
protection. Lucy decides to get married to Petrus. She accepts all that he
wants from her. She is ready to “…become a tenant on his land” Coetzee
(2000). But she has her condition. It was “…the
house remains mine…No one enters this house without my permission. Including
him. And I keep the kennels” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie felt humiliated to end up like this.
Lucy agrees that this is indeed humiliating, but she wants to start anew. She
had learned to accept, and decided to start her life again. This time with
nothing. With no privileges and power. “No cards, no weapons, no property, no
rights, no dignity. Like a dog” Coetzee
(2000). The status of Whites in the land of Blacks
has degraded to that of dogs. When Lurie caught
the young boy peeping at Lucy through the bathroom window his racial attitude
is revealed. Perhaps that all his life he has avoided seem
suddenly just and right: Teach him a lesson, Show him his place. So this is what it is like, he thinks! This is what it is
like to be a savage! Coetzee
(2000) The lines revealed
Lurie’s inner thoughts. All his life he tried to avoid his feelings regarding
the Blacks. But suddenly he realises his feelings as just and right; to him,
Blacks were indeed savage. Savage and lustful because the dark-skinned native
of South Africa was peeping through the bathroom window to look at his
daughter. Towards the end of
the novel, Lurie tells Bev Shaw, “I don’t know. I don’t know what the question
is any more. Between Lucy’s generation and mine a curtain seems to have fallen.
I didn’t even notice when it fell” Coetzee
(2000). He felt a generational divide because Lucy
had accepted the social shift around them. She is trying to frame her life
according to the new circumstances. However, Lurie was not able to let go of
the past. He cannot accept the current situation as the new normal. Lurie’s
resistance reflects a broader discomfort with loss of traditional power
structures. His resistance becomes a lens to examine how individuals entrenched
in power struggle to accept change. Lurie's resistance to change serves as a
defensive mechanism, shielding him from the discomfort of acknowledging his own
decline and irrelevance. Lurie is depicted
as a ‘moral dinosaur’ that prefers not to evolve with the new socio-economic
and political order. He is very much stuck in the past, holding onto an
archaic, glamorous picture of the past which makes it hard for him to deal with
the loss of White control and dominance. Lurie's refusal to change and
tyrannical manner are used as a vehicle to highlight the risks associated with
power and privilege. His conduct led to the creation of an atmosphere where
people feel entitled and dominant, thus making it hard for the others to rebel
against the existing order. This resistance has a negative impact on his
relationships, especially with his daughter Lucy, who has more practical and
tolerant views concerning their new world. CONSEQUENCES OF RESISTENCE Lurie assessed the
possibility of redemption through vulnerability in his life. Working at the
animal shelter where he helped Bev Shaw in the killing of unwanted dogs, it
became a meeting with death and a recognition of interdependence. Lurie's
redemption is uncertain; his approval of vulnerability comes after a persistent
wish for privilege. His social isolation results from his failure to change, to
communicate, and to face his weaknesses. It is related to the larger themes of
decline and disconnection; his physical, emotional, and cultural separation in
the novel is reflected. Lurie is trying to
find his way in post-apartheid South Africa very difficultly. He feels like a
stranger in a society that is moving on, already beyond him. His taste in art,
literature, and culture is considered to be belonging to the past and elitist,
thus further cutting him off from the world that is changing. As a White, the
superiority and the entitlement feelings that Lurie felt have created a wall
that separates him from the others. He is unable to see his flaws and admit his
mistakes; this leads him to a state of loneliness and disconnection deep-rooted
in him. Lurie is very lonely, almost on the verge of the downfall, but power
struggle is still his way of dealing with the situation of being alone. Lurie's actions
cause his separation from society, family, and friends. His sexual relations
with women are shaped by exploitation. He does not manage to build sincere
relationships, but rather uses his power and charisma to take advantage of and
control others. His unease with Black empowerment and his alienation on his
daughter's farm emphasises his difficulty in adapting to a society where White
privilege is under challenge. The very fact that Lurie is on his daughter's
farm is also a sign of the isolation of those who do not want to deal with
equality. Lurie's relocation
to Lucy's farm in the countryside of South Africa marks the transition of his
exiled from the academic and social arenas of his dominance. While he is not on
good terms with his daughter Lucy, the obligation to resign drove him to his daughter's
land. The distance between them is accentuated by the awkwardness of their
interactions; for instance, the conversations about his sins. He is living
alone on her farm, with dogs as his only companions. To a great extent it
indicates his detachment from the rest of the world. The moment Lurie gets
close to the old abandoned bulldog Katy, he declares subtly his own abandoned
identity, “He squats down, tickles her behind the ears. ‘Abandoned, are we?’ he
murmurs” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie is not a
simple character but one with many aspects presenting a morally doubtful
inclination. He is a morally ambiguous person and this quality of his character
is subtle and challenging. His moral
ambiguity exposes the intricacy of human nature, especially when power
struggles are involved. He knows what he is doing; however, he frequently
explains or legitimizes it, making the distinction between good and evil very
vague. He satiates his desires while often turning a blind eye towards the
negative impacts on others. His sense of entitlement originates from his
privileged status of being a White, middle-aged academic. Lurie's unwelcome
attention towards Melanie is certainly a power misuse; however, he still
chooses to call it ‘passion’. He understands the power difference, but he still
reasons his acts as being a matter of ‘desire’ or ‘attraction’. The way he deals
with Lucy shows his fatherly attitude, even in light of his own immoral
conduct. He feels uneasy due to her being independent in life, which manifests
his inherent prejudices. Lurie is in the midst of a moral dilemma, not really
adopting moral responsibility in full, and not completely giving it up either.
His musings on his behaviours are usually a blend of reason and discomfort. The
novel deals with morality, power, and accountability issues, thereby leaving
the readers with no choice but to contend with Lurie's conduct. His deeds are a
clear indication of the ways power can be abused for the purpose of
exploitation and manipulation. The novel indicates that morality cannot be
viewed as a Black or White matter, but rather as a complicated network of
choices and their respective consequences. Lurie's non-acceptance of the moral
aspect leads to the pondering of the very notion of responsibility and the
ramifications of one’s deeds. Nevertheless, Bev
Shaw is an important character, her influence made Lurie undergoes a subtle
transformation. Initially, when Lucy suggested him to work for the animal
clinic, he replied that, “I’m dubious, Lucy. It sounds suspiciously like
community service. It sounds like someone trying to make reparation for past
misdeeds”. Coetzee
(2000). Lucy somehow convinced Lurie to work at the
animal clinic, but he has a certain demand. He tells her, “All right, I’ll do
it. But only as long as I don’t have to become a better person. I am not
prepared to be reformed. I want to go on being myself. I’ll do it on that
basis” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie starts working with Bev at the animal
clinic even though he initially finds her plan of working for animals
irritating. However, with time, he starts to respect her selfless nature.
Because funding for animal welfare is scarce, her work often involves the
disgraceful but necessary task of euthanizing animals to end their suffering –
an act she performs with deep respect. Bev serves as a foil to Lurie’s vanity
and arrogance. By working with her, Lurie begins to learn about compassion and
humility, eventually taking over the grim duty of disposing of the euthanized
animals with dignity. He
grows empathy and humility, finally achieving a small amount of redemption and
peace through his interaction with abandoned dogs and his last deed of ‘giving
up’ a resilient stray for euthanasia, which represents his giving up of his old
ideas of pride and power. He starts to recognize his limited existence and his
reduced status in the world. His position at the animal shelter where he looks
after stray dogs makes him face the same qualities that he has been trying to
hide i.e. vulnerability and dependence on others. It is similar to his
situation while growing old in the new South Africa that he needs to deal with.
This can be interpreted as forced adaptation or slow acceptance. This slow,
unwilling acceptance of change links to the possibility of both personal and
social healing, although it is still uncertain and unfinished. The attack on
Lucy, and Lurie's subsequent reactions demonstrated his helplessness and
isolation in the face of violence. After Lucy’s incident, Lurie decides to meet
Mr. Isaac in person so that he can apologies for his deeds. Lurie realised what
Mr. Isaac would have felt regarding his daughter, because she was made to sleep
with an old man like him. He tells Mr. Isaac: In my own terms, I am being punished for what
happened between myself and your daughter. I am sunk into a state of disgrace
from which it will not be easy to lift myself. It is not a punishment I have
refused. I do not murmur against it. On the contrary, I am living it out from
day to day, trying to accept disgrace as my state of being. Is it enough for
God, do you think, that I live in disgrace without term? Coetzee
(2000) With his apology,
Lurie tried to tell Mr. Isaac that he had got his punishment. Lurie thinks that
his present situation of disgrace is due to his actions with Melanie. He is
bearing the consequences of his deeds. It is a punishment he cannot escape; he
must go through life taking his disgrace. Lurie apologising to Mr. Isaac, a
Black man, symbolises how Lurie had changed himself. He is no longer determined
to justify his actions. He had accepted his position in the new South Africa.
He considers Mr. Isaacs feelings as a father who demanded justice for his
daughter, just like Lurie himself does. Lurie even gets down on his knees to
ask for apologies, “With careful ceremony he gets to his knees and touches his
forehead to the floor” Coetzee
(2000). However, Lurie’s apology was not truly
sincere. When he was apologising to Melanie’s mother and her younger sister,
“He raises his head. The two of them are still sitting there, frozen. He meets
the mother’s eyes, then the daughter’s, and again the
current leaps, the current of desire” Coetzee
(2000). He went to apologise for his deeds because
of his realisation, but his desires for physical pleasure is still present in
him. He still longs for pleasure, unable to direct his mind towards the
businesses of the old. Yet, when Bev Shaw
talked about Melanie and their past scandal, Lurie replied that “Yes, there was
a young woman. But I was the troublemaker in that case. I caused the young
women in question at least as much trouble s she caused me” Coetzee
(2000). Lurie then tried to recall all the
encounters he had with women; he described them as enriching. He recalls
his youth and shows a feeling of gratitude. By Melanie, by the girl in Touws River; by Rosalind, Bev Shaw, Soraya: by each of them
he was enriched, and by the others too, even the least of them, even the
failures. Like a flower blooming in his breast, his heart floods with
thankfulness. Coetzee
(2000) The transformation
of Lurie’s character while working at an animal shelter and dealing with his
‘disgrace’ implies a forced and unfinished redemption. He is never resistant in
a uniform way; his resistance only comes when survival asks for it, not through
real acceptance. The final actions of Lurie open up the possibility of healing
both on a personal and social level. Through his actions, Lurie shows if
redemption is possible without the complete acceptance of change. CONCLUSION Literature is a
way to look at the social changes and people’s resistance. The resistance of
Lurie to accept social change manifests the problems of a society in
transformation. Lurie’s conflict with aging and societal transformation can be
taken as an allegory of South Africa. Some critics consider Lurie’s conflict to
be universal—aging, loss, and the human resistance to change. Others see him as
a representative of the old White elite, who are forced to face the new moral
order that has come in the post-apartheid South Africa. Through Lurie’s denial
of aging and discomfort with the changing power dynamics, Coetzee criticizes
the traditional notions of masculinity and that of having the right to be in
power. Lurie's aging acts
as a symbol of Cultural Decline. His physical and intellectual decay reflects
the erosion of old South African values. Lurie’s resistance points to the
painful period of South Africa's history during which the old power structures
are uprooted, but are still present in people's minds. With Lurie’s journey,
Coetzee raises the question: Can society really advance if the individuals that
constitute it do not want to change? The solution to that question is to be
found in Lurie’s unwilling, partial transformation; a reminder that the
acceptance of change is often a long, painful, and reluctant process. The decline in
David Lurie's physical health, his downfall as an intellectual, as well as his
moral degradation, is all taken together as broad indications of the decline of
the South African old order. His decay exposes the hollowness of his
once-powerful position. He attempts to retain the earlier order of power, but,
in the end, the labour that he is forced to perform at the animal’s clinic is a
slow but definite confrontation with time that humbles him. Ultimately, Lurie's
struggle reveals the fact that aging, like history, cannot be denied. Social
change is a continuing process and its acceptance comes only through loss. Loss
of the earlier structure of power and privilege. Lurie’s redemption, on the
other hand, is complicated and not full at all. Redemption is possible only
when one finally let go of the past. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS None. REFERENCES
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