Abstract

One might argue that narratives in fiction may ... involve truth claims on a structural or general level by providing insight into phenomena such as slavery and Holocaust, by offering a reading of a process or period, or by giving an at least plausible feel for experience and emotion which may be difficult to arrive at through restricted documentary methods. Dominick LaCapra Unless enquiries of [Truth and Reconciliation Commission] are extended, complicated and intensified in imaginings of literature, society cannot sufficiently come to terms with its past to face future. Andre Brink The representation of personal and collective trauma in Achmat Dangor's Bitter Fruit (2003) disrupts surface of reconciliation in post-apartheid South Africa and works to foreground complex and enduring ramifications of apartheid. The novel represents interacting layers of trauma in South Africa arising from structural and symbolic racial oppression and acts of extreme violence under apartheid regime. Bitter Fruit casts doubt on ability of universalized Eurocentric models of trauma (located within a specific history and set of cultural practices) to account for South African trauma without suppressing heterogeneity of experiences and responses to trauma in that locale. Homogenizing accounts exclude particular historical, social, cultural, and personal contexts of trauma. Within postcolonial discourse, for example, Elleke Boehmer observes that there are those among once-colonised for whom silences of history have not ended (132). Boehmer pays particular attention to marginalization of gender in male-authored postcolonial theory and silencing of homosexuality in postcolonial and African writing (172). In a similar way, Ato Quayson emphasizes need to articulate postcolonial experiences from positions in order to include views that fall outside the perspectives of sanctioned historical tellings of nation (192). Bitter Fruit suggests importance of taking into account specific context in which individual and collective traumas unfold by representing voices and experiences that cannot be subsumed into generalized models of trauma. The novel indicates ways in which gender, race, sexuality, class, age, religion, and language constitute and differentiate South African identities and experiences, past and present; but it focuses particularly on two ex-centric positions in South African context. Bitter Fruit subverts Manichean representations that simplify South Africa's racial problems in terms of black and white (see Wicomb and Kruger) by representing colored experiences. In focusing on sexual (and racial) violence of Lydia's rape, Bitter Fruit addresses a widely known but often unspoken area of experience in South Africa. The novel also draws attention to violence against homosexuals within colored community as well as wider homophobia in apartheid and post-apartheid society. Bitter Fruit suggests that many traumas remain unspoken and invisible, eluding representation of a collective South African experience. In novel's central narrative, silenced memory of Lydia's rape by a white policeman nineteen years earlier (which her husband Silas was forced to listen to) erupts into post-apartheid present, forcing a confrontation with suppressed traumatic past. Following rape, Lydia and Silas have lived in a cold and non-communicative marriage, becoming increasingly isolated from each other as years have gone by. The unspoken trauma overshadows their relationship and also affects their child Mikey, who is unacknowledged product of Lydia's rape. Mikey is initially unaware of rape and his own embeddedness in this traumatic history. When reads Lydia's diary, is forced to confront fact that he is child of some murderous white man, ... a boer, ... who worked for old system, was old system (131) and has to readdress his past and reassess meaning of his life. …

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