Wildernis en woestyn: omgewingskragte teen die mens s’n in <i>Boendoe</i> en <i>Toewaaisand</i>

Wilderness and desert: environmental forces against man’s in Boendoe and Toewaaisand In Chris Barnard’s “Boendoe” (1999) and Christoffel Coetzee’s “Toewaaisand” (2003), the relationship between man and nature is stressful. This article investigates the nature and intensity of the characters’ exper...

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Main Author: S. Meyer
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: AOSIS 2006-07-01
Series:Literator
Subjects:
Online Access:https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/179
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spelling doaj-65dc44ee05da4ad18764c94fa2da04d72020-11-25T00:32:10ZafrAOSISLiterator0258-22792219-82372006-07-01271577810.4102/lit.v27i1.179151Wildernis en woestyn: omgewingskragte teen die mens s’n in <i>Boendoe</i> en <i>Toewaaisand</i>S. Meyer0Fakulteit Opvoedingswetenskappe, Potchefstroomkampus, Noordwes-UniversiteitWilderness and desert: environmental forces against man’s in Boendoe and Toewaaisand In Chris Barnard’s “Boendoe” (1999) and Christoffel Coetzee’s “Toewaaisand” (2003), the relationship between man and nature is stressful. This article investigates the nature and intensity of the characters’ experience of and reaction to geographical isolation and natural environmental crises and forces in the novels. In both novels evidence of heightened interdependency between the characters is found, but also a degradation of social and communication skills and disillusionment regarding the inability to create and maintain meaningful relationships. Surrounding environmental circumstances and events lead to trauma and exhaustion in the characters from “Boendoe” and experiences of the disruption of life, isolation and estrangement of loved ones in “Toewaaisand”. Findings from within psychology are applied in this article to conjoin the experiences of characters and individual narratives with the general, human inclination to indicate relevance within the reader’s life. In both novels the influence of natural environmental factors is related to the development of liminal fields of experience. The characters experience the phases of “separation” and “limen” in Turner’s transformation model, but this is not followed by the experience of “reincorporation”. Opposed to the creativity that is usually linked with liminality, in these novels a destructive process is taking place: liminality without a hopeful or constructive prospect.https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/179Chris BarnardBoendoeChristoffel CoetzeeToewaaisandInfluence Of Natural EnvironmentLiminalityStress Man And Nature
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. Meyer
spellingShingle S. Meyer
Wildernis en woestyn: omgewingskragte teen die mens s’n in <i>Boendoe</i> en <i>Toewaaisand</i>
Literator
Chris Barnard
Boendoe
Christoffel Coetzee
Toewaaisand
Influence Of Natural Environment
Liminality
Stress Man And Nature
author_facet S. Meyer
author_sort S. Meyer
title Wildernis en woestyn: omgewingskragte teen die mens s’n in <i>Boendoe</i> en <i>Toewaaisand</i>
title_short Wildernis en woestyn: omgewingskragte teen die mens s’n in <i>Boendoe</i> en <i>Toewaaisand</i>
title_full Wildernis en woestyn: omgewingskragte teen die mens s’n in <i>Boendoe</i> en <i>Toewaaisand</i>
title_fullStr Wildernis en woestyn: omgewingskragte teen die mens s’n in <i>Boendoe</i> en <i>Toewaaisand</i>
title_full_unstemmed Wildernis en woestyn: omgewingskragte teen die mens s’n in <i>Boendoe</i> en <i>Toewaaisand</i>
title_sort wildernis en woestyn: omgewingskragte teen die mens s’n in <i>boendoe</i> en <i>toewaaisand</i>
publisher AOSIS
series Literator
issn 0258-2279
2219-8237
publishDate 2006-07-01
description Wilderness and desert: environmental forces against man’s in Boendoe and Toewaaisand In Chris Barnard’s “Boendoe” (1999) and Christoffel Coetzee’s “Toewaaisand” (2003), the relationship between man and nature is stressful. This article investigates the nature and intensity of the characters’ experience of and reaction to geographical isolation and natural environmental crises and forces in the novels. In both novels evidence of heightened interdependency between the characters is found, but also a degradation of social and communication skills and disillusionment regarding the inability to create and maintain meaningful relationships. Surrounding environmental circumstances and events lead to trauma and exhaustion in the characters from “Boendoe” and experiences of the disruption of life, isolation and estrangement of loved ones in “Toewaaisand”. Findings from within psychology are applied in this article to conjoin the experiences of characters and individual narratives with the general, human inclination to indicate relevance within the reader’s life. In both novels the influence of natural environmental factors is related to the development of liminal fields of experience. The characters experience the phases of “separation” and “limen” in Turner’s transformation model, but this is not followed by the experience of “reincorporation”. Opposed to the creativity that is usually linked with liminality, in these novels a destructive process is taking place: liminality without a hopeful or constructive prospect.
topic Chris Barnard
Boendoe
Christoffel Coetzee
Toewaaisand
Influence Of Natural Environment
Liminality
Stress Man And Nature
url https://literator.org.za/index.php/literator/article/view/179
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