Train from Rhodesia Nadine Goadimer decided that the story of the story "Train from Rhodesia" was written by a South African woman named Nadine Godima. She was born in Transvaalva on the outskirts of Johannesburg in 1923 and lives with Jewish father and British mother. She received the Nobel Prize in literature in 1991 and her first story was published when she was 14 years old. She has written for five years only since she was 9 years old.
"Train from Rhodesia" written by Nadine Gordimer is a classic South African work written in the era of advanced racial discrimination between locals and Caucasians. Although Gordima shows the importance of civil war and customs, I chose this story and took a different view of life in Africa. Strangely, even half of the world, I can still connect myself to this woman. In the apartheid era, in South Africa's ethnic division one era, a South African white train stopped at Rhodesia, staring at the local seller and cricket. Looking at the carved lion, a woman asked the price of "3 and 6" about the local irritated high price. The woman was angry with her husband and wondered how I could not pay for the lion.
"Train from Rhodesia" was one of the earliest stories of Nadine Go Digimers, first published in her "snake sound and other stories" in 1952. A short video on the short-term stay of a train in a poor African village shows the simplicity of a complex complex symbolizing Godima's other works. As a legacy of South Africa in Europe, Godimar focused most of her work on domestic apartheid injustice. Although it is not an obvious political story, "Rhodesian Train" depicts a prejudice that leads apartheid after racial discrimination becomes a law and strengthens it. Critics praised the story, because it provided a compromised, but subtle social explanation that allowed it to post comments in South Africa without reviewing it. By showing the role of the two races declining by racial disparity, the authors show how black and white South Africans are hurt by apartheid