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Herman Charles Bosman

Herman Charles Bosman (3 February 1905 – 14 October 1951) is widely regarded as South Africa's greatest short-story writer. He studied the works of Edgar Allan Poe and Mark Twain and developed a style emphasizing the use of satire. His English-language works utilize primarily Afrikaner characters and highlight the many contradictions in Afrikaner society during the first half of the twentieth century.

Herman Charles Bosman
Herman Charles Bosman
Born(1905-02-03)February 3, 1905
Kuils River, South Africa
DiedOctober 14, 1951(1951-10-14) (aged 46)
Johannesburg, South Africa
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • short-story writer
  • satirist
  • artist

Early life edit

Bosman was born at Kuils River, near Cape Town, in the Cape Colony, to an Afrikaner family. He was raised with English as well as Afrikaans. While Bosman was still young, his family travelled frequently, he spent a short time at Potchefstroom College which would later become Potchefstroom High School for Boys, he later moved to Johannesburg where he went to school at Jeppe High School for Boys in Kensington.[citation needed] While there he contributed to the school magazine. When Bosman was sixteen, he started writing short stories for the national Sunday newspaper (the Sunday Times). He attended the Johannesburg College of Education (which in 2002 was incorporated into the University of the Witwatersrand)[1] and submitted various pieces to student literary competitions.

Career and adult life edit

After graduation, Bosman accepted a teaching position in the Groot Marico district in an Afrikaans-language school. The area provided the backdrop for his best-known short stories, the Oom Schalk Lourens series (featuring an older character named Oom Schalk Lourens) and the Voorkamer sketches.

Over the June school holidays in 1926, Bosman visited his family in Johannesburg. During an argument, he shot and killed his stepbrother. Bosman was sentenced to death for this crime and was sent to death row at the Pretoria Central Prison.[2] His sentence was later reduced to ten years with hard labour. In 1930, Bosman was released on parole after serving half his sentence. His prison experiences formed the basis for his semi-autobiographical book, Cold Stone Jug.[3]

Bosman then started his own printing-press company and was part of a literary set in Johannesburg, associating with poets, journalists and writers, including Aegidius Jean Blignaut. He toured overseas for nine years, spending most of his time in London. The short stories that he wrote during this period formed the basis for another of his best-known books, Mafeking Road. At the start of the Second World War, he returned to South Africa and worked as a journalist. During this time he translated the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam into Afrikaans.

Bosman lamented the fact that Johannesburg neglected its heritage. In The Standard Theatre he complained that the city's residents:

"will pull down the Standard Theatre like they have pulled down all the old buildings, theatres, gin-palaces, dosshouses, temples, shops, arcades, cafes and joints that were intimately associated with the mining-camp days of Johannesburg. Because I know Johannesburg. And I am satisfied that there is no other city in the world that is so anxious to shake off the memories of its early origins."

Bosman's second wife was Ella Manson. The couple were renowned for their bohemian lifestyle and parties, which featured witty conversation and usually ended well after midnight.[4]

From 1948 to his death in 1951, Bosman was employed as proof editor at The Sunday Express. In addition, he was contracted to write a weekly Voorkamer story for The Forum magazine.[5]

His last wife was Helena Lake (née Stegmann). After a housewarming party in October 1951, Bosman experienced severe chest pains and was taken to Edenvale Hospital. On admission, he was asked for his birthplace. He replied, "Born Kuilsrivier – Died Edenvale Hospital." He was discharged and collapsed at home a few hours later. Bosman died as he was being rushed to hospital. He is buried in Westpark Cemetery in Westdene under a triangular headstone that reads "Die Skrywer, The Writer, Herman Charles Bosman, b 3.2.1905, d 14.10.1951."

Legacy edit

After his death, the rights to his works were auctioned. They were purchased by his last wife, Helena, and upon her death, the rights were passed to her son, who retains them. In 1960, however, Helena sold some of his documents and 123 of his water colours and pencil sketches to the Harry Ransom Center in Texas.[5]

Only three of his books were published during his lifetime: Mafeking Road published by Dassie, and Jacaranda in the Night and Cold Stone Jug published by APB. Mafeking Road has never been out of print since its publication in 1947.[5]

His biography was written several times by Valerie Rosenberg. Her first effort was called Sunflower to the Sun,[6] followed by Herman Charles Bosman, a Pictorial Biography,[7] and most recently by Herman Charles Bosman: Between the Lines.[8] The last of these contains much new research and deals in detail with aspects of Bosman's life and parentage that were previously considered taboo.

Because many of his stories were originally published in long-forgotten magazines and journals, there are a number of anthologies by different collators each containing a different selection. His original books have also been published many times by different publishers.

The Herman Charles Bosman Literary Society meets annually for readings, performances and discussions of his works.[5]

Books edit

Some of the ISBNs and publishers below may not be for the original edition.
  • Mafeking Road & Other Stories (1947), ISBN 0-7981-3902-1 Human & Rousseau, ISBN 978-0-9793330-6-4 Archipelago Books (2008)
  • Rubaijat van Omar Khajjam (1948), Colin Reed-McDonald
  • Cold Stone Jug (1949), ISBN 0-7981-3981-1 Human & Rousseau
  • Veld-trails and Pavements (1949), with Carel Bredell, Afrikaanse Pers-Boekhandel
  • Cask of Jerepigo (1957), Central News Agency
  • Unto Dust (1963), edited by Lionel Abrahams, ISBN 0-7981-1501-7 Anthony Blond
  • Bosman at his Best: a choice of stories and sketches (1965) edited by Lionel Abrahams ISBN 0-7981-0249-7 Human & Rousseau
  • Bosman's Johannesburg (1986) edited by Stephen Gray ISBN 0-7981-2001-0 Human & Rousseau
  • Ramoutsa Road (1987) ISBN 0-86852-130-2 Ad. Donker
  • A Bekkersdal Marathon (1971), ISBN 0-7981-0030-3 Human & Rousseau
  • The Earth is Waiting (1974)
  • Willemsdorp (1977), ISBN 0-7981-3901-3 Human & Rousseau
  • Almost Forgotten Stories (1979) ISBN 0-86978-167-7 H. Timmins
  • My Friend Herman Charles Bosman [1980] Perskor. author: Aegidius Jean Blignaut
  • Dead End Road [1980] AD.Donker. author: Aegidius Jean Blignaut
  • Selected Stories (1980), edited by Stephen Gray, ISBN 0-7981-1031-7 Human & Rousseau
  • The Collected Works of Herman Charles Bosman (1981), edited by Lionel Abrahams, ISBN 0-86850-029-1 Jonathan Ball
  • The Bosman I like (1981), edited by Patrick Mynhardt, ISBN 0-7981-1179-8 Human & Rousseau
  • Death Hath Eloquence (1981), edited by Aegidius Jean Blignaut, ISBN 0-86984-189-0 Christelike Uitgewersmaatskappy
  • Uncollected Essays (1981), ISBN 0-86978-167-7 Timmins
  • The Illustrated Bosman (1985), ISBN 0-86850-112-3 Jonathan Ball
  • Makapan's Cave and other stories (1987), edited by Stephen Gray, ISBN 0-14-009262-5 Penguin Books.
  • A Bosman Treasury (1991), edited by Ian Lusted, ISBN 0-7981-2830-5 Human & Rousseau
  • Jurie Steyn's Post Office (1991), ISBN 0-7981-2903-4 Human & Rousseau
  • Herman Charles Bosman : the prose juvenilia (1998), collected and introduced by M. C. Andersen, ISBN 1-86888-049-4 University of South Africa
  • Idle Talk : voorkamer stories (1999), edited by Craig MacKenzie, ISBN 0-7981-3982-X Human & Rousseau
  • Old Transvaal Stories (2000), edited by Craig MacKenzie, ISBN 0-7981-4085-2 Human & Rousseau
  • The Rooinek and Other Boer War Stories (2000), edited by Craig MacKenzie, ISBN 0-7981-4031-3 Human & Rousseau
  • Jacaranda in the Night (2000), ISBN 0-7981-4084-4 Human & Rousseau
  • Best of Bosman (2001), edited by Stephen Gray and Craig MacKenzie, ISBN 0-7981-4203-0 Human & Rousseau
  • Seed-Time and Harvest, and Other Stories (2001), edited by Craig MacKenzie, ISBN 0-7981-4186-7 Human & Rousseau
  • Verborge Skatte: Herman Charles Bosman in/on Afrikaans (2001), collected by Leon de Kock, ISBN 0-7981-4185-9 Human & Rousseau

Plays edit

  • Cold Stone Jug (1982) adapted by Barney Simon from the play by Stephen Gray ISBN 0-7981-1309-X Human & Rousseau

Notes edit

  1. ^ Joburg.org.za 6 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine, "Wits turns 85 today", retrieved 30 December 2011
  2. ^ Rosenberg, Valerie (2005). Herman Charles Bosman: Between the Lines. Struik. p. 55. ISBN 1-77007-163-6.
  3. ^ "Herman Charles Bosman guilty of murder". Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  4. ^ Jones, Shirley (2 October 2008). "Herman Charles Bosman: The ladies and the man of the Groot Marico". Witness. Retrieved 5 September 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d Snyman, Salomé (6 April 2013). "Bosman se laaste stukkie legkaart". Beeld (in Afrikaans). Retrieved 2 July 2013.
  6. ^ Rosenberg, Valerie (1981). Sunflower to the sun (2nd ed.). Cape Town: Human & Rousseau. ISBN 0-7981-1228-X.
  7. ^ Rosenberg, Valerie (1981). Herman Charles Bosman (1st ed.). Johannesburg: Perkskor. ISBN 0-628-02148-8.
  8. ^ Rosenberg, Valerie (2005). Herman Charles Bosman : between the lines. Cape Town: Struik. ISBN 1-77007-163-6.

External links edit

  • The Herman Charles Bosman Literary Society
  • Snyman, Salomé. "Willemsdorp by Herman Charles Bosman: the small-town locale as fictional vehicle for commentary on social and moral issues in the South African historical context." Tydskrif vir letterkunde 49.2 (2012): 60–71.

herman, charles, bosman, february, 1905, october, 1951, widely, regarded, south, africa, greatest, short, story, writer, studied, works, edgar, allan, mark, twain, developed, style, emphasizing, satire, english, language, works, utilize, primarily, afrikaner, . Herman Charles Bosman 3 February 1905 14 October 1951 is widely regarded as South Africa s greatest short story writer He studied the works of Edgar Allan Poe and Mark Twain and developed a style emphasizing the use of satire His English language works utilize primarily Afrikaner characters and highlight the many contradictions in Afrikaner society during the first half of the twentieth century Herman Charles BosmanHerman Charles BosmanBorn 1905 02 03 February 3 1905Kuils River South AfricaDiedOctober 14 1951 1951 10 14 aged 46 Johannesburg South AfricaOccupationNovelist short story writer satirist artist Contents 1 Early life 2 Career and adult life 3 Legacy 4 Books 5 Plays 6 Notes 7 External linksEarly life editBosman was born at Kuils River near Cape Town in the Cape Colony to an Afrikaner family He was raised with English as well as Afrikaans While Bosman was still young his family travelled frequently he spent a short time at Potchefstroom College which would later become Potchefstroom High School for Boys he later moved to Johannesburg where he went to school at Jeppe High School for Boys in Kensington citation needed While there he contributed to the school magazine When Bosman was sixteen he started writing short stories for the national Sunday newspaper the Sunday Times He attended the Johannesburg College of Education which in 2002 was incorporated into the University of the Witwatersrand 1 and submitted various pieces to student literary competitions Career and adult life editAfter graduation Bosman accepted a teaching position in the Groot Marico district in an Afrikaans language school The area provided the backdrop for his best known short stories the Oom Schalk Lourens series featuring an older character named Oom Schalk Lourens and the Voorkamer sketches Over the June school holidays in 1926 Bosman visited his family in Johannesburg During an argument he shot and killed his stepbrother Bosman was sentenced to death for this crime and was sent to death row at the Pretoria Central Prison 2 His sentence was later reduced to ten years with hard labour In 1930 Bosman was released on parole after serving half his sentence His prison experiences formed the basis for his semi autobiographical book Cold Stone Jug 3 Bosman then started his own printing press company and was part of a literary set in Johannesburg associating with poets journalists and writers including Aegidius Jean Blignaut He toured overseas for nine years spending most of his time in London The short stories that he wrote during this period formed the basis for another of his best known books Mafeking Road At the start of the Second World War he returned to South Africa and worked as a journalist During this time he translated the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam into Afrikaans Bosman lamented the fact that Johannesburg neglected its heritage In The Standard Theatre he complained that the city s residents will pull down the Standard Theatre like they have pulled down all the old buildings theatres gin palaces dosshouses temples shops arcades cafes and joints that were intimately associated with the mining camp days of Johannesburg Because I know Johannesburg And I am satisfied that there is no other city in the world that is so anxious to shake off the memories of its early origins Bosman s second wife was Ella Manson The couple were renowned for their bohemian lifestyle and parties which featured witty conversation and usually ended well after midnight 4 From 1948 to his death in 1951 Bosman was employed as proof editor at The Sunday Express In addition he was contracted to write a weekly Voorkamer story for The Forum magazine 5 His last wife was Helena Lake nee Stegmann After a housewarming party in October 1951 Bosman experienced severe chest pains and was taken to Edenvale Hospital On admission he was asked for his birthplace He replied Born Kuilsrivier Died Edenvale Hospital He was discharged and collapsed at home a few hours later Bosman died as he was being rushed to hospital He is buried in Westpark Cemetery in Westdene under a triangular headstone that reads Die Skrywer The Writer Herman Charles Bosman b 3 2 1905 d 14 10 1951 Legacy editAfter his death the rights to his works were auctioned They were purchased by his last wife Helena and upon her death the rights were passed to her son who retains them In 1960 however Helena sold some of his documents and 123 of his water colours and pencil sketches to the Harry Ransom Center in Texas 5 Only three of his books were published during his lifetime Mafeking Road published by Dassie and Jacaranda in the Night and Cold Stone Jug published by APB Mafeking Road has never been out of print since its publication in 1947 5 His biography was written several times by Valerie Rosenberg Her first effort was called Sunflower to the Sun 6 followed by Herman Charles Bosman a Pictorial Biography 7 and most recently by Herman Charles Bosman Between the Lines 8 The last of these contains much new research and deals in detail with aspects of Bosman s life and parentage that were previously considered taboo Because many of his stories were originally published in long forgotten magazines and journals there are a number of anthologies by different collators each containing a different selection His original books have also been published many times by different publishers The Herman Charles Bosman Literary Society meets annually for readings performances and discussions of his works 5 Books editSome of the ISBNs and publishers below may not be for the original edition Mafeking Road amp Other Stories 1947 ISBN 0 7981 3902 1 Human amp Rousseau ISBN 978 0 9793330 6 4 Archipelago Books 2008 Rubaijat van Omar Khajjam 1948 Colin Reed McDonald Cold Stone Jug 1949 ISBN 0 7981 3981 1 Human amp Rousseau Veld trails and Pavements 1949 with Carel Bredell Afrikaanse Pers Boekhandel Cask of Jerepigo 1957 Central News Agency Unto Dust 1963 edited by Lionel Abrahams ISBN 0 7981 1501 7 Anthony Blond Bosman at his Best a choice of stories and sketches 1965 edited by Lionel Abrahams ISBN 0 7981 0249 7 Human amp Rousseau Bosman s Johannesburg 1986 edited by Stephen Gray ISBN 0 7981 2001 0 Human amp Rousseau Ramoutsa Road 1987 ISBN 0 86852 130 2 Ad Donker A Bekkersdal Marathon 1971 ISBN 0 7981 0030 3 Human amp Rousseau The Earth is Waiting 1974 Willemsdorp 1977 ISBN 0 7981 3901 3 Human amp Rousseau Almost Forgotten Stories 1979 ISBN 0 86978 167 7 H Timmins My Friend Herman Charles Bosman 1980 Perskor author Aegidius Jean Blignaut Dead End Road 1980 AD Donker author Aegidius Jean Blignaut Selected Stories 1980 edited by Stephen Gray ISBN 0 7981 1031 7 Human amp Rousseau The Collected Works of Herman Charles Bosman 1981 edited by Lionel Abrahams ISBN 0 86850 029 1 Jonathan Ball The Bosman I like 1981 edited by Patrick Mynhardt ISBN 0 7981 1179 8 Human amp Rousseau Death Hath Eloquence 1981 edited by Aegidius Jean Blignaut ISBN 0 86984 189 0 Christelike Uitgewersmaatskappy Uncollected Essays 1981 ISBN 0 86978 167 7 Timmins The Illustrated Bosman 1985 ISBN 0 86850 112 3 Jonathan Ball Makapan s Cave and other stories 1987 edited by Stephen Gray ISBN 0 14 009262 5 Penguin Books A Bosman Treasury 1991 edited by Ian Lusted ISBN 0 7981 2830 5 Human amp Rousseau Jurie Steyn s Post Office 1991 ISBN 0 7981 2903 4 Human amp Rousseau Herman Charles Bosman the prose juvenilia 1998 collected and introduced by M C Andersen ISBN 1 86888 049 4 University of South Africa Idle Talk voorkamer stories 1999 edited by Craig MacKenzie ISBN 0 7981 3982 X Human amp Rousseau Old Transvaal Stories 2000 edited by Craig MacKenzie ISBN 0 7981 4085 2 Human amp Rousseau The Rooinek and Other Boer War Stories 2000 edited by Craig MacKenzie ISBN 0 7981 4031 3 Human amp Rousseau Jacaranda in the Night 2000 ISBN 0 7981 4084 4 Human amp Rousseau Best of Bosman 2001 edited by Stephen Gray and Craig MacKenzie ISBN 0 7981 4203 0 Human amp Rousseau Seed Time and Harvest and Other Stories 2001 edited by Craig MacKenzie ISBN 0 7981 4186 7 Human amp Rousseau Verborge Skatte Herman Charles Bosman in on Afrikaans 2001 collected by Leon de Kock ISBN 0 7981 4185 9 Human amp RousseauPlays editCold Stone Jug 1982 adapted by Barney Simon from the play by Stephen Gray ISBN 0 7981 1309 X Human amp RousseauNotes edit Joburg org za Archived 6 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Wits turns 85 today retrieved 30 December 2011 Rosenberg Valerie 2005 Herman Charles Bosman Between the Lines Struik p 55 ISBN 1 77007 163 6 Herman Charles Bosman guilty of murder Retrieved 22 January 2021 Jones Shirley 2 October 2008 Herman Charles Bosman The ladies and the man of the Groot Marico Witness Retrieved 5 September 2023 a b c d Snyman Salome 6 April 2013 Bosman se laaste stukkie legkaart Beeld in Afrikaans Retrieved 2 July 2013 Rosenberg Valerie 1981 Sunflower to the sun 2nd ed Cape Town Human amp Rousseau ISBN 0 7981 1228 X Rosenberg Valerie 1981 Herman Charles Bosman 1st ed Johannesburg Perkskor ISBN 0 628 02148 8 Rosenberg Valerie 2005 Herman Charles Bosman between the lines Cape Town Struik ISBN 1 77007 163 6 External links editThe Herman Charles Bosman Literary Society City of Johannesburg Bosman page Snyman Salome Willemsdorp by Herman Charles Bosman the small town locale as fictional vehicle for commentary on social and moral issues in the South African historical context Tydskrif vir letterkunde 49 2 2012 60 71 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Herman Charles Bosman amp oldid 1183376255, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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