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COETZEE: Spending spring at
Stanford.
Penguin |
John M. Coetzee, recipient
of the 2003 Nobel Prize in literature, has returned
to Stanford this quarter as the Stein Visiting Writer
in the creative writing program. He was a visiting fellow
at the Humanities Center in 2001 and taught in the English
department last year.
“All of us in creative writing are true admirers
of his work and feel his presence will bring a unique
benefit to the students who work with him,” says
English professor Eavan Boland, who directs the program.
“He will be teaching a course called Reading for
Writers, which we think of as a quarter-long conversation
with students, based around the reading and writing
of fine fiction.”
Coetzee is “a writer who combines a dark, ethical
vision with a stripped-bare, lyrical prose,” Boland
says. She adds that what appears to many readers as
“a perpetual contradiction—between the restraint
of his style and the volatility of the content—makes
his work rich, moving and often disturbing, as in his
novel Disgrace.”
A literary scholar, essayist and novelist, the 64-year-old
Coetzee is a native of South Africa. He is the first
author to win Britain’s Booker Prize for fiction
twice—in 1983 for Life and Times of Michael
K, and in 1999 for Disgrace.
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