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What is the relationship between J.M Coetzee's Foe and Daniel De Foe's Robert Cruseo?

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Question added by Fateh Guerdi , Teacher of English language , Malek Ben Naby Secondary School
Date Posted: 2015/06/24
Anupama Ramankandath
by Anupama Ramankandath , estimation engineer , streamline

Foe is a novel by J.M Cotzee. Woven around the existing plot of Robinson cruesoFoe is written from the perspective of Susan Barton, a castaway who landed on the same island inhabited by "Cruso" and Friday as their adventures were already underway. Like Robinson Crusoe, it is a frame story, unfolded as Barton's narrative while in England attempting to convince the writer daniel foe to help transform her tale into popular fiction. J. M. Coetzee’s highly poetic novel, Foe is a testament both to the potency and limitations of language as an expression of truth and as the antithesis of silence. The story behind it is derived not only from what is not uttered through the medium of language, but what is conveyed through non-verbal communication – through Susan Barton’s storytelling leverage and through Friday’s dancing and music-making.

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