Going Home (Flamingo) - Heartwarming Wall Art for Home Decor, Perfect for Living Room, Bedroom & Office
Going Home (Flamingo) - Heartwarming Wall Art for Home Decor, Perfect for Living Room, Bedroom & Office
Going Home (Flamingo) - Heartwarming Wall Art for Home Decor, Perfect for Living Room, Bedroom & Office
Going Home (Flamingo) - Heartwarming Wall Art for Home Decor, Perfect for Living Room, Bedroom & Office

Going Home (Flamingo) - Heartwarming Wall Art for Home Decor, Perfect for Living Room, Bedroom & Office

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Description

From the winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, a compelling account of her return to the land in which she grew up.In 1956, some seven years after departed for England, Doris Lessing returned home to Southern Rhodesia. It was a journey that was both personal – a revisiting of a land and people she knew – and, inevitably, political: Southern Rhodesia was now part of the Central African Federation, where the tensions between colonialism and self-determination were at their most deeply felt.‘Going Home’ is a book that combines journalism, reportage and memoir, humour, farce and tragedy; a book fired by the love of one of the twentieth century’s greatest writers for a country and a continent that she felt compelled to leave.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
Lessing documents the nature of the political and cultural milieu of Southern Rhodesia in the mid-fifties. In many ways this is an excellent historical investigation in journalistic prose.My concern is with the book's underlying assumption that that those who left Britain to occupy the colony either became less moral, or were already less moral, than those who stayed behind. Lessing tends to represent those who remained back in Britain as denizens of proper and correct behavior. Life in Africa is thus seen to exert a corrupting influence on otherwise wholesome and correctly mannered British people:"Why was it that when white people came out from Britain, first they were indignant about the colour bar and the treatment of the Africans, and then they very fast became as rude and cruel as the old Rhodesians?" (p162)I feel the book has the quality of being a bit dated for its moralizing perspective."Africa belongs to the Africans" and Europe belongs to the Europeans is the underlying premise of the book -- and although it is unspoken, it comes across in many different ways, such as in the formulation quoted above.What needs to be examined, in order to give a sense of context to the book, is whether attitudes remain automatically "civilized" so long as they do not go abroad.Also, are black Africans not similarly subject to "corruption" by virtue of living in Africa -- or is this corrupting effect of the continent only effective on the whites who have gone there?Lessing's book attempt to teach a moral lesson about colonialism, but leaves these fundamental philosophical questions unanswered.