dc.description.abstract | This paper examines the virtual absence criticism on the woman
character who is a main feature in the fiction of the South African writer,
Alex La Guma, who at one time was the Secretary General of the
Afro-Asian Writers' Association. He had been a long-standing opponent
and, therefore, victim of the apartheid regime in South Africa, which, as
a result, had banned his works. The stature of La Guma as a South
African (and indeed an African) writer is indisputable. The woman
character appears in twenty of his twenty-two works of fiction. Despite
her significant presence in these works, she has received scanty attention
from literary critics in an age when gender paradigms in literary
scholarship have come in vogue all over the world-as is discernible in
even works on South African literature that pay tribute to not only the
woman writer but also the woman character. On the whole however La
Guma's woman character hardly appears as a central feature in the
criticism of his fiction despite her prevalence III his works. His woman
character lives III a fictional world where injustice reigns and the
categories of the roles she plays are not fortuitous but arise from literary
characters as personal and social individuals created using realism as
reflections of the material world. To this end, on the personal level, her
three primary roles are maternal, romantic, and marital as she is depicted
Towards an Appreciation of the Woman Character in Alex La Guma's Fiction I 155
as a biological or surrogate mother, a lover or a spouse; on the social
level, her two primary roles are occupational and political, as she has
responsibilities and duties outside the home circle that comprise her social
undertakings, economic activities, or political work. This study suggests
critical tools that can be used in an evaluation that would yield the
aesthetic ideal she embodies in both her depiction and her roles. | en_US |