Nadine Gordimer-Biography, Age, State of Origin

Nadine Gordimer-Biography, Age, State of Origin

We the zambaiaminds.com team are so excited to inform you about the Biography of the prominent people in south Africa

Nadine Gordimer (20 November 1923 – 13 July 2014) was a South African writer and political activist. She received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1991, recognized as a writer “who through her magnificent epic writing has … been of very great benefit to humanity”. 

Gordimer’s writing dealt with moral and racial issues, particularly apartheid in South Africa. Under that regime, works such as Burger’s Daughter and July’s People were banned. She was active in the anti-apartheid movement, joining the African National Congress during the days when the organization was banned, and gave Nelson Mandela advice on his famous 1964 defence speech at the trial which led to his conviction for life. She was also active in HIV/AIDS causes.

Early life 

Gordimer was born near Springs, Gauteng, an East Rand mining town outside Johannesburg. She was the second daughter of her parents. Her father, Isidore Gordimer, was a Lithuanian Jewish immigrant watchmaker from Žagarė (then Russian Empire, now Lithuania),  and her mother, Hannah “Nan” (Myers) Gordimer, was from London. [5] Her mother was from an assimilated family of Jewish origins; Gordimer was raised in a secular household.[2][6]

Family background 

Gordimer’s early interest in racial and economic inequality in South Africa was shaped in part by her parents. Her father’s experience as a refugee from Tsarist Russia helped form Gordimer’s political identity, but he was neither an activist nor particularly sympathetic toward the experiences of black people under apartheid.  Conversely, Gordimer saw activism by her mother, whose concern about the poverty and discrimination faced by black people in South Africa led her to found a crèche for black children.  Gordimer also witnessed government repression first-hand as a teenager; the police raided her family home, confiscating letters and diaries from a servant’s room. 

Gordimer was educated at a Catholic convent school, but was largely home-bound as a child because her mother, for “strange reasons of her own”, did not put her into school (apparently, she feared that Gordimer had a weak heart) Home-bound and often isolated, she began writing at an early age, and published her first stories in 1937 at the age of 15.  Her first published work was a short story for children, “The Quest for Seen Gold”, which appeared in the Children’s Sunday Express in 1937; “Come Again Tomorrow”, another children’s story, appeared in Forum around the same time. At the age of 16, she had her first adult fiction published. 

Career 

Gordimer studied for a year at the University of the Witwatersrand, where she mixed for the first time with fellow professionals across the colour bar. She also became involved in the Sophiatown renaissance. She did not complete her degree, but moved to Johannesburg in 1948, where she lived thereafter. While taking classes in Johannesburg, she continued to write, publishing mostly in local South African magazines. She collected many of these early stories in Face to Face, published in 1949.

In 1951, the New Yorker accepted Gordimer’s story “A Watcher of the Dead”,  beginning a long relationship, and bringing Gordimer’s work to a much larger public. Gordimer, who said she believed the short story was the literary form for our age continued to publish short stories in the New Yorker and other prominent literary journals. Her first publisher, Lulu Friedman, was the wife of the Parliamentarian Bernard Friedman, and it was at their house, “Tall Trees” in First Avenue, Lower Houghton, Johannesburg, that Gordimer met other anti-apartheid writers. 

Gordimer’s first novel, The Lying Days, was published in 1953.

Activism and professional life 

The arrest of her best friend, Bettie du Toit, in 1960 and the Sharpeville massacre spurred Gordimer’s entry into the anti-apartheid movement. Thereafter, she quickly became active in South African politics, and was close friends with Nelson Mandela’s defence attorneys (Bram Fischer and George Bizos) during his 1962 trial. She also helped Mandela edit his famous speech “I Am Prepared to Die”, given from the defendant’s dock at the trial. When Mandela was released from prison in 1990, she was one of the first people he wanted to see. 

During the 1960s and 1970s, she continued to live in Johannesburg, although she occasionally left for short periods of time to teach at several universities in the United States. She had begun to achieve international literary recognition, receiving her first major literary award, the W. H. Smith Commonwealth Literary Award, in 1961. Throughout this time, Gordimer continued to demand through both her writing and her activism that South Africa re-examine and replace its long-held policy of apartheid

 

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