
J.M. Coetzee (John Maxwell Coetzee) is a South African-born writer, academic, and Nobel Laureate best known for his profound and often unsettling novels that explore themes of morality, power, identity, and human suffering. J.M. Coetzee’s Disgrace, is a multilayered story set against the backdrop of turbulent political situation in post-apartheid South Africa. The erosion of human values is a central theme in J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace, explored through the personal, societal, and historical lenses of post-apartheid South Africa. Coetzee uses the protagonist, David Lurie, and the changing dynamics of power, morality, and identity to illustrate how traditional human values—such as dignity, responsibility, empathy, and justice—are undermined or redefined in a society undergoing radical transformation. In the apartheid Africa the Europeans or the White rulers considered the blacks as slaves. They were insulted, humiliated, abused and punished. The inhuman treatment saw the retaliation of this. The democracy in South Africa emerged with a sinister design to attack the Whites. After coming to power the blacks started crushing the pride and honor of the whites. Coetzee has depicted misuse of democracy in South Africa. Democracy advocates law and order. It never meant to disgrace, insult or exploit the minority on the issues of race, religion, language and ethnicity. But the minority is always at the mercy of the majority. The novel pictures the deep erosion of the human values. The research paper attempts to focus on the erosion of the human values in Coetzee’s Disgrace.
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