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The question which keeps haunting much of Coetzee's writing is how to do justice to the (racial/gender) Other in the dominant language that has historically been one of the instruments ensuring that this Other is kept subordinate. This question is about taking sides: would you side with the dominant history written by the victors? Or would you side with the vanquished in the unfailing quest for justice, even if the possibility of restorative justice is limited? In Waiting for the Barbarians, the Magistrate is tormented by this ethical question. In his strange relationship with the barbarian girl, he tries to respond ethically to the otherness of this individual who has been classified as inferiro by virtue of race and gender. This (im)possibility of representing the Other constitutes the Magistrate's version of hell and his obsession with shame, damnation, ethical responsibility, and searching for salvation.
Here are three audio clips regarding this well-known South African novelist and his work. Listen carefully and write down anything that inspires you.