Symbolism in "Master Harold"... and the Boys
The title of this play Master Harold and the boys is symbolic. The title suggests a hierarchy. This play has been written in the South African context. The setting of the play has been South Africa. Master Harold, a seventeen years old boy, is a white. But the boys who are matures men of the forties are black and have been working in the restaurant of Hally.
Athol Fugard (11 June 1932)
The boys, though grownups are called boys only on the ground of their dark complexion. But it is strange to hear a seventeen year old boy as Master Harold. The names of the boys are, respectively, Sam and Willie. They are waiters in the restaurant. The title symbolizes the racial discrimination of South Africa. South Africa was the country where the apartheid law was creating two states within a nation, state of blacks and state of whites in a nation. Racism was creating a boundary between two states. The play exami...
The burden of womanhood
in ‘Dancing in the Dust’
January 4, 2016 Elliot Ziwira - At the
Bookstore, Features, Opinion & Analysis
Elliot Ziwira @ The Book Store
Men go for long periods in the mines, occasionally
coming back to their families which shreds the
familial fabric expected to mould the communal
and national consciousness.
“Dancing in the Dust” (2002) by Kagiso Lesego
Molope, published by Oxford University Press
Southern Africa (Pvt) Limited, purveys among a
plethora of thematic concerns, the struggles that
women endure in an oppressive, uncompromising
and intolerant world, which derives excitement
from the squalid and mundane.
Told in the first person singular narrative voice,
the story captures the fears of a 13-year-old girl,
Tihelo, whose only defence against the vagaries
of human folly is her zeal for life, regardless of
the many...
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