Showing posts with label philanthropy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label philanthropy. Show all posts

The Amateurs, by Nadine Gordimer

BIOGRAPHY

Nadine Gordimer was born in 1923 in Springs, Transvaal, South Africa, and died at 91 in Johannesburg, its largest city.

Her parents were Jewish; they had fled from pogroms in Eastern Europe, but she wasn’t educated religiously. Nevertheless, her parents sent her to a catholic school, although, after a time, she left school and was raised a home because some heart problems her mother thought dangerous.

At home she read a lot, and from a very young age, she started to write stories.

Later, she studied Law at Witwatersrand University, but only for a year, and so she didn’t complete her degree. But there she started to mix with Black people and to understand their situation, the meaning of segregation and later of apartheid.

When she was 25, she moved to Johannesburg. She married a dentist with whom she had a daughter. They got divorced and she got married again in 1954 to an art dealer. This marriage lasted until her husband’s death. They got a son.

But she didn’t stop writing or trying to publish her stories, and in 1949, she published her first collection, Face to Face. Then, two years later, the magazine The New Yorker issued one of her stories and she continued publishing there for a long time. Although she also wrote some novels, she said that the 20th century literary genre par excellence was the short story, because it’s a way to see an event “by the light of a flash”, and because every short story is “a discrete moment of truth”.

She was an activist against the apartheid and some of her books were banned in South Africa. In 1960, they arrested her best friend, and the police shot Black people during a pacific demonstration in Sharpeville, a “Black location”. From that moment, she became firmly committed to Mandela’s African National Congress. She helped Mandela in his 1962 trial when he delivered his famous three-hour speech, “I Am Prepared to Die”.

In post-apartheid times, she was active in movements related to AIDS, and she was vice-president of International PEN.

As a curiosity, she rejected being nominate for the Orange Prize in 1998… because it was only for women.

Also, when asked about Isreali policies, she always said that they didn’t have anything to do with the apartheid system, and thus she was criticised for this opinion.

 

SUMMARY

The Amateurs is one of Gordimer’s first stories. It was published in the collection Face to Face. It has, like much of her narrative, some autobiographical details. Nadine, as a teenager, played the part of Gwendolen of The Importance of Being Earnest, by Oscar Wilde, in an amateur company.

In the story, a group of white do-gooders went to a Location, that is, a Black people slum (later called “townships”) to perform the Oscar Wilde’s play. At the beginning, they could’t find the place where they had to play, but they felt that was a poor quarter. Then came a boy, a policeman, who led them to the right place. There was a bit of misunderstanding because it was thought that it would be a concert, instead of a play. All in all, they were placed in a poor room (not exactly a dressing room) where that could get dressed and put on their make-up. As they had seen what kind of audience they were going to have, they became aware that it would be a difficult play for them, that they wouldn’t understand anything, and so it wouldn’t be necessary to dress up too much.

In the first act, most of the spectators were teachers, or clerks or civil servants. As the actors and actresses realized they didn’t grasp the subtility and the irony of the text, they began to act out more histrionically in order to elicit more laughter from the audience.

The first act finished, the people who were outside the hall because they weren’t invited or because they didn’t feel like going in, entered the house and filled it up. Now there were all kinds of people there, even babies, and sitting even on the floor. So, there was a full house, although some people didn’t pay much attention to the play. The actors and actresses went on overdoing voices and gestures, and thus throwing away the spirit of the play.

At the end of it, they collected a very long round of applause, and a girl from the audience gave the players a moving speech thanking them and telling the Location youth to follow the example of the performers to improve their behaviour and to be useful to their community.

The company of actors and actresses left the place with mixed feelings: happy because they had made some people happy, and sad because they think they had betrayed the piece and cheated the audience.

It’s important to note that at no point does the narrator mention the characters’ skin colour. Nor can we find any hint about the time period when the story is set.

 

QUESTIONS

-Why do you think the narrator didn’t mention skin colours?

-In your opinion, is it so difficult to understand The Importance of Being Earnest? Do you need to have a higher education to enjoy some works of art?

-Overdoing the performance, did they cheat the audience? Or were they being only didactic?

-Oscar Wilde said: “It is the problem of slavery, and we try to solve it by amusing the slaves”. And “Philanthropic people lose all sense of humanity. It’s their distinguishing characteristic”. In your view, philanthropy has good, or bad effects, on the people who get its “benefits”?

-Do you agree with Gordimer’s opinion about the Orange Prize and about Israeli politics?

 

VOCABULARY

props, drain, wash, knobkerrie, lean-to, straggling, shrilly, bustle, sideburn, drawing room, pouter-pigeon, long-hipped, colour bar, belched, hamming, splurged out, knocked up, tittered,