This article is aimed at studying several aspects of post colonial, feminism and symbolism, fables and metaphor. For this purpose, I chose J. M Coetzee 's novel "Shame" (1999). The story takes place in Cape Town, South Africa after the apartheid era. David Lurie is a white man teaching English at a technical university. He is a "communication" instructor and teaches "romantic literature". Rely has divorced twice, and one of them has the impression that he is not satisfied with his work.
Illusion and reality of J. M. Coetzee's disgrace The shame of J. M. Coetzee's novel is the story of Dr. David Lurie, a whimsical university professor who is rude at the surface. But this story not only talks about the conflicts and painful changes that exist in the micro world of Ruri's thinking but also the fundamental parallelism of the social, political and moral system which is the reality of today's South Africa I also talk about themes. When David Lurie talks to people and living things outside his normal environment, his shortcomings between the world and myopic reality begin to crystallize with disturbing clarity.
The shame of J. M. Coetzee is the story of David Lurie, a professor of a romantic poet who divorced twice. Rurie taught at the CAP engineering university in South Africa during the post apartheid era, but his life was not expensive, filled with passion and eventually was not satisfactory. He taught the course without protest, he was neither happy nor satisfied. He is neither happy nor happy; he exists within the parameters imposed by himself and is only broken by regularly visiting colored prostitutes. Lurie was spurred by Soraya by appointment to pursue Melanie, one of his colored students on Thursday afternoon. Although his activities are far from the legal definition of rape, his relationship is arrogantly self-absorbed. Melanie and her father filed suit against him, and Luli was taken to the University Investigation Committee. He acknowledged that he committed all offenses but boldly refused to publicly declare repentance.