Wednesday, March 16, 2016

What is the author's tone in Kaffir Boy, and how does he use language to achieve a specific tone? I need two examples.

In Kaffir Boy, the author Mark
Mathabane describes his experiences coming of age in apartheid South Africa. The tone of
the book ranges from fearful and angry to hopeful and
determined.


Through much of the story, Mathabane merely
describes the events from his perspective. In these sections, the tone is often fearful
or confused. In one section when Mathabane is a young child, his father is arrested for
failing to carry a proper pass, a kind of ID book that white South Africans used to use
to keep track of the whereabouts of black South Africans. Mathabane asks his
mother:



"How
come we won't be celebrating Christmas this year,
Mama?"


"Your father isn't here," my mother
said.


"But Christmas is here," I
said.


"Yes, I know," my mother said sadly. "But we don't
have the money to celebrate it
with."



In this segment,
Mathabane matter-of-factly portrays a scene of sadness and confusion, using details
important to a child to show how the absence of his father affected his
family.


In other sections, Mathabane is much more didactic.
Instead of merely relating the events of his life, he comments on them, making direct
points about his beliefs. For instance, he describes how he stood apart and refused to
debase himself as others sometimes did, even if it meant missing the opportunity to earn
money for food:


readability="11">

Throughout all the years that I lived in South
Africa, people were to call me a fool for refusing to live life the way they did and by
doing the things they did. Little did they realize that in our world, the black world,
one could only survive if one played the fool, and bided his
time.



Such passages help to
reinforce Mathabane's themes of the importance of trusting and respecting
oneself.

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