The concept of double colonization is one of the crucial issues for showing the status of people, and especially women, in colonized societies. The marginalization and subaltern are broad categories that characterize individuals, whose voices and actions have been muted, drastically reinterpreted, lost, or consciously swept away. The South African novelist, John Maxwell Coetzee (1940- ), depicts the situation of people in South Africa during both apartheid and post-apartheid regimes in which colonized people, particularly women, are colonized by colonizers. Coetzee’s Disgrace (1999) shows injustice and marginality coming mainly from imperialism and corrupt system of South Africa. In this paper postcolonial theories of Edward Said (1935-2003), Frantz Fanon (1925-1961), and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak (1942) are used to analyze people’s condition in countries which experience colonialism and postcolonialism. Women in South Africa are encountered with double colonization and subalternity by both imperial system and male-dominated society. In Disgrace the language of dominance should support oppressive people, characters, and especially women, therefore they are considered as Other and inferior in community.