One of the most celebrated writers in the English speaking countries and the Noble Prize winner, J
@Author, Family and Personal Life
One of the most celebrated writers in the English speaking countries and the Noble Prize winner, J
J. M. Coetzee born at
In 1963, Coetzee got married for the first time to Philippa Jubber but got divorced in 13 years. They both have a daughter Gisela and a son Nicolas together. His son Nicolas died in a car accident when he was only 23.
In 2002, Coetzee migrated to Australia and lives there now with his partner Dorothy Driver in Adelaide, South Australia, where he has an honorary position at the University of Adelaide.
Coetzee was born on 9 February 1940 in Cape Town, Cape Province, South Africa to Zacharias Coetzee and Vera Coetzee. His father was a lawyer and also worked for the government and did sheep farming as well.
He was only eight years old when his father lost his job with the government because of some incongruities over the apartheid policy and the family had to move to Worcester, Cape Province.
His family spoke English at home but Coetzee spoke in Afrikaans with friends and relatives. He spent most of his early life in Cape Town and Cape Province. He went to St. Joseph’s College.
After finishing school, he went to the University of Cape Town to study mathematics and English and received his Bachelors’ degree in Arts in English language in 1960 and Bachelor of Arts with Honors in Math the next year.
In 1962, Coetzee moved to the United Kingdom and started working as a computer programmer there with IBM, London. He lived in the UK for 3 years and while he was still there he was given an MA degree in Arts by the University of Cape Town.
In 1965, Coetzee started with a PhD in English, linguistics and Germanic languages at Texas University. His thesis was a computer stylistic analysis of the great literary works of Samuel Beckett. It was called ‘The English Fiction of Samuel Beckett’.
In 1968, after the completion of his PhD, Coetzee began to teach English literature at the State University of New York, Buffalo. He stayed there in the job for three years and tried to get a PR but was denied.
In 1971, he returned to South Africa after being denied the permanent residence in the States. He started teaching English Literature there at the University of Cape Town and eventually became the Distinguished Professor of Literature.
In 1974, his first book called ‘Dusklands’ was published. The novel has two storylines - one is on the psychological effects of Vietnam War on people involved in it and the other is on 18th century South Africa.
He has been the winner of Booker Prizes twice for his novels like ‘Life & Time of Michael K’, ‘Disgrace’ and has been many times nominated for it for his works like: ‘Summertime’, ‘Elizabeth Costello’, ‘Slow Man’, etc.
In 2003, he was chosen for the Nobel Prize in Literature for the ‘Dusklands’.