Alan Paton�s sublime: race, landscape and the transcendence of the liberal imagination

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2005

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

University of KwaZulu Natal

Abstract

This article develops a postcolonial reading of the sublime by suggesting that aesthetic theories of the sublime were, in their classical philosophical formulations by Edmund Burke and Immanuel Kant, founded on problematic assumptions of racial difference. In the colonial sphere, it is argued, the sublime could discursively manage and contain the contradictions inherent in the aesthetic appreciation and appropriation of contested landscapes. This is particularly evident in the Alan Paton's writing. This article looks at the origins and the influence of rhetoric of the sublime in Paton's work, particularly in his novel Cry, the Beloved Country, and argues that the sublime is a key discursive structure in the shaping of Paton's complex and ambivalent representation of South Africa's politicised and racialised landscape.

Description

Keywords

Paton, Alan, Postcolonial reading, Influence of Rhetoric of Sublime, Cry the Beloved Country

Citation

Wittenberg, H. (2005). Alan Paton�s sublime: race, landscape and the transcendence of the liberal imagination. Current Writing: Text and Reception in Southern Africa, 17(2):3-23