05 Nadine Gordimer – The 1960s and 70s

Home » UJ Library » Information Resources » Special Collections » Online Exhibitions » Nadine Gordimer » 05 Nadine Gordimer – The 1960s and 70s

During the 1960s and 1970s Nadine continued to live in Johannesburg and occasionally left to lecture at universities in the United States of America. It was during these years that she had begun to achieve international literary recognition and received her major award in 1961. Several of her works were banned during this time, namely:

  • The late bourgeois world banned in 1976 for a decade.
  • A world of strangers was banned for twelve years.
  • Burger’s daughter published in 1979 was banned a month later.

Throughout these years, Nadine regularly took part in anti-apartheid demonstrations and travelled internationally speaking out against apartheid and political tyranny. For decades she gave insight into the textures of a South African experience and the currents of our history that showed that the country’s realities were jagged, difficult and uncomfortable.

A World Of Strangers

Burgers Daughter

The Late Bourgeois World