2022
DOI: 10.17159/tl.v59i1.12721
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Stories of Fathers, Stories of the Nation: Fatherhood and Paternal Power in South African Literature (Grant Andrews)

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“…He reveals a stereotypical obsession with patrilineal reproduction when the narrator notes that Manie "takes Amor's face in his hands, turns it up towards him, looking at her features, searching for some sign that could only come from his body" (Galgut 2021, 32). But in the tradition of much post-apartheid fiction, he is also a decidedly "declining patriarch" (Andrews 2021). Andrews (2021, 23) reminds us that the traditional patriarch's power is "tied to his masculinity, and he demonstrates this power through traditional masculine symbols of dominance, through links to patriarchal systems and institutions that support his power."…”
Section: Fatherhoodmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…He reveals a stereotypical obsession with patrilineal reproduction when the narrator notes that Manie "takes Amor's face in his hands, turns it up towards him, looking at her features, searching for some sign that could only come from his body" (Galgut 2021, 32). But in the tradition of much post-apartheid fiction, he is also a decidedly "declining patriarch" (Andrews 2021). Andrews (2021, 23) reminds us that the traditional patriarch's power is "tied to his masculinity, and he demonstrates this power through traditional masculine symbols of dominance, through links to patriarchal systems and institutions that support his power."…”
Section: Fatherhoodmentioning
confidence: 99%