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July's People

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Language
  
English

Published in English
  
1981

Originally published
  
1981

Page count
  
195

Country
  
South Africa

3.5/5
Goodreads

Publication date
  
1981

Pages
  
195

Author
  
Nadine Gordimer

Genre
  
Alternate history

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Publisher
  
Raven/Taurus (RSA) Jonathan Cape (UK) Viking Press (US)

Media type
  
Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Characters
  
Maureen Smale, July, Bamford Smale, Victor Smale, Royce Smale, Daniel, Gina Smale, Nyiko, Martha, The chief

Similar
  
Nadine Gordimer books, Novels

July s people


July's People is a 1981 novel by the South African writer Nadine Gordimer. It is set in a near future version of South Africa where Apartheid is ended through a civil war. Gordimer wrote the book before the end of apartheid as her prediction of how it would end. The book was notably banned in South Africa after its publication, and later under the post-Apartheid government.

Contents

July s people discussion


Plot

The novel is set during a fictional civil war in which black South Africans have violently overturned the system of apartheid. The story follows the Smales, a liberal White South African family who were forced to flee Johannesburg to the native village of their black servant, July. Maureen tries working with the women in the fields, digging up leaves and roots. Afterward, she goes to see July, who is working on the bakkie.

When July says she should not work with the women, she asks if he fears she will tell his wife about Ellen. He angrily asserts that she can only tell Martha that he has always been a good servant. Maureen, frightened, realizes that the dignity she thought she had always conferred upon him was actually humiliating to him. He informs her that he and the Smales have been summoned to the chief's village. Though July has authority in his village, they still must ask the chief's permission to stay. Maureen struggles with her new subservience to July.

After Gina goes to play with Nyiko and Bam goes with Victor and Royce to fish, a helicopter with unidentifiable markings flies over the village.

Reception

Anne Tyler, writing for the New York Times, praised the novel, saying that Gordimer "has outdone herself" and that the work was “So flawlessly written that every one of its events seems chillingly, ominously possible”. In his book Frantz Fanon and the Future of Cultural Politics: Finding Something Different, Athony C. Allessadnrini referred to Tyler's take on the novel as "maddening" given that the "events" she describes result in the fall of Apartheid.

Controversy

July's People was temporarily banned from schools in Gauteng Province, in South Africa for a brief period in 2001. The government of Gauteng province provided the following reason for the ban:

"the subject matter is questionable ... the language that is used is not acceptable, as it does not encourage good grammatical practices ... the reader is bombarded with nuances that do not achieve much ... any condemnation of racism is difficult to discover - so the story comes across as being deeply racist, superior and patronising".

The book was banned alongside other books, including several Shakespeare plays, among them Julius Caesar and Othello.

References

July's People Wikipedia