Waiting for the Barbarians

Author(s): J.m. Coetzee

Fiction | 2000s

How do you eradicate contempt, especially when that contempt is founded on noting more substantial than differences in table manners, variations in the structure of the eyelid? Shall I tell you what I sometimes wish? I wish that these barbarians would rise up and teach us a lesson, so that we would learn to respect them.


After twenty years of peacefully running one of the Empire's settlements, a magistrate takes pity on an enemy barbarian who has been tortured. He enters into an awkward intimate relationship with her, and then is himself imprisoned as an enemy of the state.


Waiting for the Barbarians is a disturbing political fable about oppression, the fraught desire for reparation, and about living with a troubled conscience under an unjust regime. In examining who we think we are, Coetzee probes our dreams, thoughts, shame and desires.


In awarding the Nobel Prize to Coetzee in 2003, the committee called this lauded novel 'a political thriller in the tradition of Joseph Conrad, in which the idealist's naiveté opens the gates to horror'.


Product Information

General Fields

  • : 9781925773866
  • : Text Publishing Company
  • : Text Publishing Company
  • : 0.15
  • : June 2019
  • : ---length:- '23.4'width:- '15.3'units:- Centimeters
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : J.m. Coetzee
  • : FA
  • : 152
  • : 823/.914
  • : English
  • : 1907
  • : Paperback