Abstract
M.A.
This study attempts to trace the interrelationship between literature and its historical
contexts in six stories by South African women writers. Six South African writers have
been selected because their work foregrounds the theme of oppression and because they
are representative of the different groupings of the South African population. In her story
"The Sisters", Pauline Smith explores the silencing effects of gender oppression in a
patriarchy. In "The Apostasy of Carlina", Bertha Goudvis writes of women-on-women
oppression between the white and black races. Jayapraga Reddy explores the complexities of intercultural relationships in "Friends". In "Let Them Eat Pineapples", Lizeka Mda explores the oppressive effects of industrial-development on the tribal system in Transkei.
In "Last Look at Paradise Road", Gladys Thomas, like Goudvis before her, focuses on the
racial discrimination practised by whites against blacks. Gcina Mhlope reveals women-on-women oppression practised both by white-on-black and black-on-black. A chronological
ordering of these short stories reveals certain changes in the extent to which attitudes to
oppression are revealed and criticized. This study suggests that while there has not been
a significant decrease in the degree of oppression to which South African women have
been subjected, the increasing awareness and exposure of gender oppression suggests the promise of self-actualization in the struggle for democracy in South Africa.