
New Books Network Nadine Gordimer: “Living in South Africa’s Interregnum” James Lecture, October 14, 1982
Feb 15, 2026
Nadine Gordimer, South African novelist and Nobel laureate known for novels on apartheid, offers a candid James Lecture. She names the era an interregnum and probes white identity, the role of writers, and how institutions and politics must be reimagined. Short, urgent meditations on moral choice, black leadership, and rebuilding a democratic left.
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Interregnum Frames South Africa's Crisis
- Nadine Gordimer calls South Africa's present an "interregnum": the old order is dying and the new has yet to be born.
- This liminal state produces moral, social, and identity crises for whites and blacks alike.
Whites Must Redefine Their Role
- Gordimer argues whites must redefine themselves to belong in a future black-led Azania.
- She stresses offering skills isn't enough; whites must offer themselves and change institutions from within.
Follow, Listen, And Act Differently
- Gordimer relays Desmond Tutu: blacks should lead and whites must follow and learn to listen.
- She urges whites to develop distinct, complementary forms of struggle rather than usurping leadership.

