The Train from Rhodesia | Themes
In "The Train from Rhodesia," a train's short stop in a poor African village highlights the racial and class barriers that typify South African life in the 1950s. Though only a few pages long, Gordimer's story encompasses several themes besides racial inequality, including greed, poverty, and conscience.
Race and Racism
In South Africa, apartheid, the legal separation of races, became law in 1947. It is not necessary for Gordimer to mention the race of the characters in the story. Readers in the 1950s understood that the "old native" was black and the rich tourists...
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- The Train from Rhodesia: Introduction
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- The Train from Rhodesia: Nadine Gordimer Biography
- The Train from Rhodesia: Characters
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