Debbie Go Home: The Psychological Dimension
Debbie Go Home: The Psychological Dimension
Debbie Go Home: The Psychological Dimension
DEBBIE GO HOME
Paton's position as the principal of a reformatory
for delinquent African boys gives him a chance to have an
insight into the criminal world of Johannesburg. In his
collection of short stories, Debbie Go Home he explores this
world and its inhabitants in a realistic fashion.
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general have used the City Hall Steps in
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Johannesburg as their platform.
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able to exert so much might, he is right. "What kindness he
receives is the kindness shown to animals. So when he is
allowed to attend the white man’s international Rugby matches
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he cheers the visiting team".
below the human level and forget as to how they are supposed
to conduct themselves as human beings.
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of the blacks. It focusses on racial conflict and tint) on
back door when she comes to his house. The black man is
Act" which says that the Minister can reserve any occupation
two brothers and sisters. Their names are Richard and Dickie
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and Anna and Mina respectively. He is naughty and
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in achieving or arriving at a true and complete reformation.
The boy again and again falls prey to the temptations of the
evil ways of the other self, thus preventing him from,
becoming a holy man inspite of the fact that he very much
aims at it.
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spirit of brotherhood among people belonging to different
races and colours because it is founded on the very principle
of difference. The difference.that difference makes prevents
them from arriving at universal brotherhood.
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knowledge that we lived in the shadow of a
great danger and powerless against it. It was
no place for a white person to pose in any
mantle of power or authority, for this death
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gave the lie to both of them.
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own age, plans in a cold blooded manner to rob his own father
and kill if necessary-just for that sake of that month’s pay
with which the father would be returning from his work place.
The title refers not merely to the external, material
wasteland where the action takes place but more appropriately
to the internal, the spiritual wasteland that has set in the
minds and lives of these blacks. The external impoverished
and sterile state robs them of life’s essence and spiritual
richness thus prompting them to act * in a hopeless and
shockingly devitalised manner leaving not even a glimmer of
hope for the future.
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Bookshop in Von Brandis street where his sculpture is
all whites are not cruel, biased, and blind to the virtues of
the blacks. Even they are capable of being cordial and kind
to the blacks.
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This story puts forward the problems encountered
by the principal of the Reformatory {the narrator, in this
case) with the Juvenile delinquents in general and with
Sponono in particular. Though the narrator tries to be very
patient with this boy and takes personal care to reform him
Sponono’s mischievous and fickle nature never allows him to
change his ways. He keeps on repeating trivial crimes and he
is equally ready to admit his guilt. The story has ah
ambivalent ending with Sponono’s future course of life left
undecided. It is quite in line with the inexplicable and
wayward nature of the boy.
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boy as a domestic servant. As a result, many boys become
absconders. The young Coetzee gives the principal an idea
human consumption.
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them. The system of apartheid has led to the process of
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REFERENCES
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