The environmental imagination in Arthur Nortje's poetry

dc.contributor.advisorKlopper, Dirk
dc.contributor.authorKaze, Douglas Eric
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-09T09:08:13Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.description.abstractThis thesis seeks to contribute to the conversations in the humanities about the treatment of the physical environment in the context of a global ecological fragility and increased scholarly interest in the poetry of Arthur Nortje, a South African poet who wrote in the 1960s. While previous studies on Nortje concentrate on the political, psychic and technical aspects of his poetry, this study particularly explores the representations of the environment in Nortje's poetic imagination. Writing in the dark period of apartheid in South Africa's history, Nortje's poetry articulates a strong interest in the physical environment against the backdrop of official racialization of space and his personal nomadic life and exile. The poetry abounds with constant intersections of nature and culture (industrialism, urbanity and the quotidian), a sense of place and a deep sense of dislocation. The poems, therefore, present a platform from which to reevaluate conventional ecocritical ideas about nature, place-attachment and environmental consciousness. Drawing mainly on Felix Guattari's ideas of three ecologies and transversality along with other theories, I conduct the study through what I call a transversal postcolonial environmental criticism, which considers the ecological value of the kind of assemblages that Nortje's works represent. The first chapter focuses on conceptualizing a postcolonial approach to the environment based on Guattari's concept of transversality to lay the theoretical foundation for the whole work. The second chapter analyses Nortje's poetic imagination of place and displacement through his treatment of the private-public tension and the motif of exile. While the third chapter examines Nortje's depiction of nature as both an everyday and urban phenomenon, the fourth chapter turns to his direct treatment of environmental crises handled through his imagination of the Canadian urban spaces, exile memory of apartheid geography, war and ecocide and the human body as a subject of environmental degradation. The fifth chapter, which is the conclusion, takes a brief look at the implication of Nortje's complex treatment of the environment on postcolonial environmentalism.
dc.description.degreeDoctoral thesis
dc.description.degreePhD
dc.format.extent169 pages
dc.identifier.otherhttp://hdl.handle.net/10962/58024
dc.identifier.urihttps://researchrepository.ru.ac.za/handle/123456789/9549
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisherRhodes University, Faculty of Humanities, Department of Literary Studies in English
dc.rightsKaze, Douglas Eric
dc.subjectNortje, Arthur, 1942-1970 -- Criticism and interpretation
dc.subjectEcology in literature
dc.subjectRace awareness in literature
dc.subjectSouth African poetry (English) -- History and criticism
dc.subjectNature in literature
dc.subjectTransversal postcolonial environmental criticism
dc.titleThe environmental imagination in Arthur Nortje's poetry
dc.typeAcademic thesis

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