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South African literature

South African literature is the literature of South Africa, which has 11 national languages: Afrikaans, English, Zulu, Xhosa, Sotho, Pedi, Tswana, Venda, Swazi, Tsonga and Ndebele.

Overview edit

Elleke Boehmer (cf. Cullhed, 2006: 79) writes: "Nationalism, like patriarchy, favours singleness—one identity, one growth pattern, one birth and blood for all ... [and] will promote specifically unitary or 'one-eyed' forms of consciousness". The first problem any student of South African literature is confronted with, is the diversity of the literary systems. Gerrit Olivier notes, "While it is not unusual to hear academics and politicians talk about a 'South African literature', the situation at ground level is characterised by diversity and even fragmentation". Robert Mossman adds that "One of the enduring and saddest legacies of the apartheid system may be that no one – White, Black, Coloured (meaning of mixed-race in South Africa), or Asian – can ever speak as a "South African." The problem, however, pre-dates Apartheid significantly, as South Africa is a country made up of communities that have always been linguistically and culturally diverse. These cultures have all retained autonomy to some extent, making a compilation such as the controversial Southern African Literatures by Michael Chapman, difficult. Chapman raises the question:

[W]hose language, culture, or story can be said to have authority in South Africa when the end of apartheid has raised challenging questions as to what it is to be a South African, what it is to live in, whether South Africa is mlg, and, if so, what its mythos is, what requires to be forgotten and what remembered as we scour the past in order to understand the present and seek a path forward into an unknown future.

South Africa has 11 national languages: Afrikaans, English, Zulu, Xhosa, Sotho, Pedi, Tswana, Venda, SiSwati, Tsonga, and Ndebele. Any definitive literary history of South Africa should, it could be argued, discuss literature produced in all 11 languages. But the only literature ever to adopt characteristics that can be said to be "national" is Afrikaans. Olivier argues: "Of all the literatures in South Africa, Afrikaans literature has been the only one to have become a national literature in the sense that it developed a clear image of itself as a separate entity, and that by way of institutional entrenchment through teaching, distribution, a review culture, journals, etc. it could ensure the continuation of that concept." Part of the problem is that English literature has been seen within the greater context of English writing in the world, and has, because of English's global position as ', not been seen as autonomous or indigenous to South Africa – in Olivier’s words: "English literature in South Africa continues to be a sort of extension of British or international English literature." The African languages, on the other hand, are spoken across the borders of Southern Africa - for example, Tswana is spoken in Botswana, and in Zimbabwe, and in Lesotho. South Africa's borders were drawn up by the British Empire and, as with all other colonies, these borders were drawn without regard for the people living within them. Therefore: in a history of South African literature, do we include all Tswana writers, or only the ones with South African citizenship? Chapman bypasses this problem by including "Southern" African literatures.

The second problem with the African languages is accessibility, because since the African languages are regional languages, none of them can claim the readership on a national scale comparable to Afrikaans and English. Sotho, for instance, while transgressing the national borders of the RSA, is on the other hand mainly spoken in the Free State, and bears a great amount of relation to the language of for example, Zulu. So the language cannot claim a national readership, while on the other hand being "international" in the sense that it transgresses the national borders.

Olivier argues that "There is no obvious reason why it should be unhealthy or abnormal for different literatures to co-exist in one country, each possessing its own infrastructure and allowing theoreticians to develop impressive theories about polysystems". Yet political idealism proposing a unified "South Africa" (a remnant of the colonial British approach) has seeped into literary discourse and demands a unified national literature, which does not exist and has to be fabricated. It is unrealistic to ever think of South Africa and South African literature as homogenous, now or in the near or distant future, since the only reason it is a country at all is the interference of European colonial powers. This is not a racial issue, but rather has to do with culture, heritage and tradition (and indeed the constitution celebrates diversity). Rather, it seems more sensible to discuss South African literature as literature produced within the national borders by the different cultures and language groups inhabiting these borders. Otherwise the danger is emphasising one literary system at the expense of another, and more often than not, the beneficiary is English, with the African languages being ignored. The distinction "black" and "white" literature is further a remnant of colonialism that should be replaced by drawing distinctions between literary systems based on language affiliation rather than race.

Afrikaans edit

Afrikaans is a Germanic language closely related to Dutch. It has its origins in the 17th century, but was only officially recognised in 1875 when the Genootskap van Regte Afrikaners was established. Afrikaans is spoken throughout South Africa, and is the mother tongue of both whites and coloureds (in the South African sense, meaning a specific independent culture rather than the disparaging European or American use of the term). The literary history is thus short, but surprisingly vibrant. The major literary histories are H. P. Van Coller's Perspektief en Profiel, J. C. Kannemeyer's Geskiedenis van die Afrikaanse literatuur, and Dekker's Afrikaanse Literatuurgeskiedenis. Lewis Nkosi (cf. Cullhed, 2006: 18) claims that "in South Africa there exists an unhealed—I will not say incurable—split between black and white writing". This split occurs because, Nkosi claims, black writers are "largely impervious for the most part to cultural movements which have exercised great influence in the development of white writing". The Afrikaans literary system, in contrast to the African languages, engages with European artistic movements such as Symbolism, expressionism, modernism, post-modernism, Dadaism and the like, offering literature familiar to a European or American audience.

Poetry edit

Some of the early names include Leipoldt and Langenhoven, who wrote the national anthem ("Die Stem"). Early poetry often deal with the Anglo-Boer War, and it is only in the 1930s that poetry reaches a significant literary standard. N. P. van Wyk Louw is the vanguard of the new movement, called Dertigers, along with his brother WEG Louw, and Elisabeth Eybers, although they were all to write in future literary periods. Olivier notes Van Wyk Louw's predominance: "It was only in the Thirties that a fully developed theory about Afrikaans as a national literature was launched by the erudite poet, N. P. van Wyk Louw, in his two collections of essays Lojale verset (1939) and Berigte te velde (1939)". Van Wyk Louw introduced international literary theories and movements into the South African literary scene on a much larger scale than any of his predecessors, and his "theory provided the intellectual and philosophical space within which poets and novelists could exercise their craft without fear of transgression; in short, it became the paradigm for Afrikaans literature" (Olivier). D. J. Opperman started writing in the 1940s, and was to have a particularly prominent role with his anthology, Groot Verseboek.

The next major paradigm shift came in the 1960s, with T. T. Cloete and Ingrid Jonker, who, after her death, attained cult status. Cloete et al. discuss this literary watershed in Rondom Sestig. Cloete is further noteworthy for his compilation, Literêre Terme en Teorieë (1992), which is one of the most encompassing works on literary theory available on the global market, although written in Afrikaans. Some modern poets of note include Joan Hambidge, Hennie Aucamp, Ernst van Heerden, Antjie Krog and Gert Vlok Nel. Breyten Breytenbach is regarded by many as one of the best, if not the best, Afrikaans poet. He spent a number of years in prison for his political beliefs during apartheid and later lived in France. Breytenbach's latest work, "Die windvanger" was published in 2007. The major poetry anthologies are DJ Opperman's Groot Verseboek, Foster and Viljoen's Poskaarte, Gerrit Komrij's controversial Die Afrikaanse poësie in 1000 en enkele gedigte, and André P. Brink's Groot Verseboek, a remake or reworking of Opperman's anthology.

Prose edit

Being a predominantly agricultural society, the plaasroman (farm novel) plays a prominent role in early as well as later novels. One of the archetypes is C. M. van den Heever's Laat Vrugte, which lay the foundations for parodies in the 1960s and later such as Etienne Leroux's Sewe dae by die Silbersteins, André P. Brink's Houd-den-bek and Eben Venter's Ek stamel ek sterwe. Another example is Marie Linde's novel Onder bevoorregte mense, published in 1925 and also issued in English as Among Privileged People.[1] Even some English novels, such as J. M. Coetzee's Disgrace, remind one of the plaasroman. As urbanisation became more prominent during the time of the two World Wars, other forms emerged, notably the dorpsroman (town novel) such as Lettie Viljoen's Karolina Ferreira, Etienne van Heerden's Die Swye van Mario Salviati, or Alexander Strachan's [af] Die Werfbobbejaan.

Afrikaans writing tends to be critical of conservative culture, and during the Apartheid regime, critical of politics as well. André P. Brink and Etienne Leroux deserve special mention, Brink not only because he is accessible to English readers (he writes in English and Afrikaans, e.g. Duiwelskloof is available as Devil's Valley), but also because the vast oeuvre he produced (prose and drama) sets him apart as arguably the greatest South African writer. Leroux produced less, but had a profound influence on the literary scene. His characters are often outsiders, and his satirical view on South African issues embodies alchemistic, Jungian and Cabbalistic theories and philosophies, with the novel reading like a palimpsest with different levels of meaning. This style had a profound influence on writers such as Ingrid Winterbach (Lettie Viljoen), Alexander Strachan, and Etienne van Heerden's magical realist novels.

With the war in Angola, grensliteratuur (border literature) started playing an important role, such as Dine van Zyl's [af] Slagoffers, Christiaan Bakkes's Skuilplek and Alexander Strachan's 'n Wêreld sonder grense. After political changes in 1994, an emphasis on the past has become an important feature as South Africans attempted to make sense of their past, of which Dan Sleigh's Eilande and André P. Brink's Duiwelskloof are examples. Triomf by Marlene van Niekerk deals with poor Afrikaners in a legendary suburb of Johannesburg, where the Apartheid regime demolished the old black township Sophiatown, in order to build houses for the white lower-class. Triomf has been translated into English by Leon de Kock.

Another writer who often regresses to earlier times is André P. Brink, e.g. Anderkant die Stilte (in English available as The Other Side of Silence), which is set during the German occupation of Namibia. Andre Brink was the first Afrikaner writer to be banned by the government after he released the novel A Dry White Season about a white South African who discovers the truth about a black friend who dies in police custody. In recent years, gay and lesbian writing has also begun to feature, e.g. Johann de Lange, and Eben Venter's Ek stamel ek sterwe. Political turmoil and the opening of South Africa's borders after the 1994 elections have resulted in many writers moving abroad, or writing about their time spent overseas, e.g. Jaco Fouché's Ryk van die Rawe. Other contemporary issues include crime (Jaco Fouché's Die avonture van Pieter Francken, Etienne van Heerden's In stede van die liefde and others) and other government issues such as corruption. In short, Afrikaans prose tends to be critical of the dominant ideologies and the government of the time, the society inhabiting this space and the people living within this society. From a European perspective, Afrikaans prose produces works of a high standard and is artistically and intellectually capable of engaging with the best European and American writers.

English literature edit

Prose edit

One of the first literary works of note is Olive Schreiner's 1883 The Story of an African Farm, which can be linked to Van den Heever's Laat Vrugte as a plaasroman. The novel was a revelation in Victorian literature: it is heralded by many as introducing feminism into the novel form. However, Mossman (1990: 41) argues that "The most frequently taught work of South African literature in American classrooms is Cry, the Beloved Country (1948) by Alan Paton". A possible reason for this is that it was made into a film starring James Earl Jones, and it depicts a typical racist situation that fits well with American perceptions of South African society. Paton also produced Too Late the Phalarope, another text criticising Apartheid politics, in particular the Immorality Act that forbade interracial sexual relations. During the 1950s, Drum became a hotbed of political satire, fiction, and essays, giving a voice to urban black culture. Around the same time, future Nobel laureate Nadine Gordimer began publishing her first stories. Her most famous novel, July's People, was released in 1981, depicting the collapse of white-minority rule. Athol Fugard's Tsotsi was also made into a film, although Fugard is usually better known for his dramas. Several influential black poets became prominent in the 1970s such as Mongane Wally Serote, whose most famous work, No Baby Must Weep, gave insight into the everyday lives of black South Africans under Apartheid. Lewis Nkosi, essentially an essayist, made a crossover to novel writing and published three novels: Mating Birds (1986), Underground People (2002) and Mandela's Ego (2006). Another famous black novelist, Zakes Mda, transitioned from poetry and plays to becoming a novelist. His novel The Heart of Redness won the 2001 Commonwealth Writers Prize, and was made a part of the school curriculum across South Africa. Miriam Tlali was the first black woman to publish a novel in South Africa with Muriel at Metropolitan (1975) (also known as Between Two Worlds). John Maxwell (J. M.) Coetzee was also first published in the 1970s. He became internationally recognised in 1983 with his Booker Prize-winning novel Life & Times of Michael K. His 1999 novel Disgrace won him his second Booker Prize as well as the 2000 Commonwealth Writers' Prize. He is also the recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2003. South African English writing has produced two Nobel Prize winners: Nadine Gordimer and J. M. Coetzee.

Other prominent texts include Mine Boy by Peter Abrahams, Alex La Guma's Walk in the Night, Breyten Breytenbach's The True Confessions of an Albino Terrorist, Marlene van Niekerk's Triomf, Nadine Gordimer's Burger's Daughter, Andre Brink's Dry White Season, Richard Rive's Buckingham Palace, District Six, Andre Brink's Rumours of Rain, Nadine Gordimer's July's People, Sipho Sepamla's Ride on the Whirlwind, and Mongane Serote's To every birth its blood. David Lambkin also deserves mentioning, The Hanging Tree reading like a Leroux novel with various Jungian and alchemistic substrates.

Drama edit

Athol Fugard's Master Harold and the boys is a drama about race relations, and Boesman and Lena depicts the hardships suffered by South Africa's poor. Athol Fugard's plays have been regularly premiered in fringe theatres in South Africa, London (The Royal Court Theatre) and New York. Another noteworthy drama is Zakes Mda's We shall sing for the fatherland.

Recent plays have addressed the high levels of violent crime, such as Lara Foot Newton's Tshepang, Athol Fugard's Victory and Mpumelelo Paul Grootboom's Relativity.

Poetry edit

Tony Ullyatt's The Lonely Art: An Anthology includes South African English poetry. English poetry in South Africa is often considered "good" by whether or not it criticises Apartheid, or whether or not it depicts life "as it is", rather than the Afrikaans emphasis on literary merit taken from Russian Formalism and introduced by Van Wyk Louw.

Professor Chris Mann[2] is a poet presently associated with Rhodes University and has compiled a number of anthologies of poetry.

African languages edit

Although there are nine official African languages in South Africa, most speakers are fluent in Afrikaans and English. Coupled with the small market for writing in African languages, this has led many African writers to write in English and Afrikaans. The first texts produced by black authors were often inspired by missionaries and frequently deal with African history, in particular the history of kings such as Chaka. Modern South African writing in the African languages tends to play at writing realistically, at providing a mirror to society, and depicts the conflicts between rural and urban settings, between traditional and modern norms, racial conflicts and most recently, the problem of AIDS.

In the first half of the 20th century, epics largely dominated black male writing: historical novels, such as Sol T. Plaatje's Mhudi: An Epic of South African Native Life a Hundred Years Ago (1930), Thomas Mofolo's Chaka (trans. 1925), and epic plays including those of H. I. E. Dhlomo, or heroic epic poetry such as the work of Mazizi Kunene. These texts "evince black African patriarchy in its traditional form, with men in authority, often as warriors or kings, and women as background figures of dependency, and/or mothers of the nation" (Cullhed, 2006: 21). Female literature in the African languages is severely limited because of the strong influence of patriarchy, but over the last decade or two, society has changed much and it can be expected that more female voices will emerge.

Zulu edit

Some of the most prominent Zulu authors are BW Vilakazi, Mazisi Kunene, RRR Dhlomo, HIE Dhlomo, JL Dube, Njabulo Ndebele, Nimrod Ndebele, EA Made, and DBZ Ntuli.

Xhosa edit

Ityala lamawele (The Lawsuit of the Twins) by S. E. K. Mqhayi is the first extant novel in the Xhosa language. It was published in 1914 by the Lovedale Press, and has been a significant influence on subsequent isiXhosa literature.

Other prominent Xhosa authors are AC Jordan, JJR Jolobe, ZS Qangule, KS Bongela, Godfrey Mzamane, Rubusana, Peter Mtuze and Guybon Sinxo. A female writer of note is Sindiwe Magona. Her 1998 novel, Mother to Mother, deals with violence at the end of Apartheid through the killing of American student Amy Biehl. Magona writes both in English and Xhosa.

Sesotho edit

Some of the most prominent Sesotho authors are MKPD Maphala, BM Khaketla, N.S. Puleng, Thomas Mofolo, and Makali Isabella Mokitimi.

Pedi edit

Some of the most prominent Pedi authors are OK Matsepe, HDN Bopape, HP Maredi, SR Machaka, MS Nchabeleng and Ramaila.

Tswana edit

Some of the most prominent Tswana authors are Sol Plaatje, DB Moloto, DPS Monyaise, SA Moroke, Gilbert Modise, MJ Ntsime, Leetile Disang Raditladi (who had a crater on Mercury named after him), MD Mothoagae, JHK Molao.

Literary festivals edit

The Franschhoek Literary Festival was launched in 2007[3] and has been taking place once a year since then. Its focus is on English-speaking South African literature[3] that includes fiction, non-fiction and poetry. Every year a few distinguished international authors are also invited.[3] The Knysna Literary Festival first took place in 2009 with similar objectives.[4] In contrast, the Open Book Festival in Cape Town wants to be international with authors and audience from around the world.[5] It also sees itself as a place where South African writers can promote themselves.[5] The Open Book Festival was first launched in 2011.[5] All three festivals also aim to draw children and young adults into reading by organizing special events for these audiences and funding projects such as school libraries.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Van Coller, 1998, p. 26.
  2. ^ Eve, Jeanette (2003). A Literary Guide to the Eastern Cape: Places and the Voices of Writers. Juta and Company Ltd. p. 136. ISBN 978-1-919930-15-2.
  3. ^ a b c "about : FRANSCHHOEK LITERARY FESTIVAL". www.flf.co.za. Retrieved 26 August 2017.
  4. ^ "Knysna Literary Festival". www.knysnaliteraryfestival.co.za. Retrieved 26 August 2017.
  5. ^ a b c "About - Open Book Festival". Open Book Festival. Retrieved 27 February 2016.
  6. ^ http://www.flf.co.za/about/, http://www.knysnaliteraryfestival.co.za/, http://openbookfestival.co.za/about/

Further reading edit

  • Attridge, Derek and Rosemary Jolly, eds. 1998. Writing South Africa: Literature, Apartheid, and Democracy, 1970–1995. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Baderoon, Gabeba (December 2015). Jain, Andrea R. (ed.). ""I Compose Myself": Lesbian Muslim Autobiographies and the Craft of Self-Writing in South Africa". Journal of the American Academy of Religion. 83 (4). Oxford: Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Academy of Religion: 897–915. doi:10.1093/jaarel/lfv075. eISSN 1477-4585. ISSN 0002-7189. JSTOR 43900142. LCCN sc76000837. OCLC 1479270.
  • Boehmer, Elleke. 1998. Endings and New Beginning: South African Fiction in Transition. Attridge and Jolly 43–56.
  • Brink, André, and J. M. Coetzee, eds. 1986. A Land Apart: A South African Reader. London: Faber and Faber.
  • Chapman, Michael. The Politics of Identity: South Africa, Story-telling, and Literary History.
  • Chapman, Michael. 1996. Southern African Literatures. London: Longman.
  • Coetzee, J. M. 1988. White Writing: On the Culture of Letters in South Africa. New Haven: Yale UP.
  • Cullhed, C. 2006. Grappling with Patriarchies. Narrative Strategies of Resistance in Miriam Tlali's Writings. Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis. Studia Anglistica Upsaliensia 131. 233 pp. Uppsala.
  • Dekker, G. 1961. Afrikaanse literatuurgeskiedenis. Cape Town: Nasionale Boekhandel Bpk.
  • Fullerton, Ian. 1980, Politics and the South African Novel in English, in Bold, Christine (ed.), Cencrastus No. 3, Summer 1980, pp. 22–23.
  • Jenkins, Elwyn. National Character in South African Children’s Literature. Routledge, 2006. ISBN 978-0-415-97676-3.
  • Kannemeyer, J.C. 1978. Die geskiedenis van die Afrikaanse literatuur, Band I. Pretoria: Academica.
  • Kannemeyer, J.C. 1983. Die geskiedenis van die Afrikaanse literatuur, Band 2. Pretoria: Academica.
  • Koch, Jerzy, 2015. A History of South African Literature: Afrikaans Literature 17th - 19th Centuries, Pretoria: Van Schaik.
  • Mossman, Robert. South African Literature: A Global Lesson in One Country. The English Journal, Vol. 79, No. 8 (December 1990), pp. 41–43.
  • Olivier, Gerrit. Afrikaans and South African literature.
  • Van Coller, H.P. (red.) 1998. Perspektief en profiel. 'n Afrikaanse literatuurgeskiedenis I. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik.
  • Van Coller, H.P. (red.) 1998. Perspektief en profiel. 'n Afrikaanse literatuurgeskiedenis II. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik.
  • Van Coller, H.P. (red.) 2006. Perspektief en profiel. 'n Afrikaanse literatuurgeskiedenis III. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik.

south, african, literature, literature, south, africa, which, national, languages, afrikaans, english, zulu, xhosa, sotho, pedi, tswana, venda, swazi, tsonga, ndebele, contents, overview, afrikaans, poetry, prose, english, literature, prose, drama, poetry, afr. South African literature is the literature of South Africa which has 11 national languages Afrikaans English Zulu Xhosa Sotho Pedi Tswana Venda Swazi Tsonga and Ndebele Contents 1 Overview 2 Afrikaans 2 1 Poetry 2 2 Prose 3 English literature 3 1 Prose 3 2 Drama 3 3 Poetry 4 African languages 4 1 Zulu 4 2 Xhosa 4 3 Sesotho 4 4 Pedi 4 5 Tswana 5 Literary festivals 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingOverview editElleke Boehmer cf Cullhed 2006 79 writes Nationalism like patriarchy favours singleness one identity one growth pattern one birth and blood for all and will promote specifically unitary or one eyed forms of consciousness The first problem any student of South African literature is confronted with is the diversity of the literary systems Gerrit Olivier notes While it is not unusual to hear academics and politicians talk about a South African literature the situation at ground level is characterised by diversity and even fragmentation Robert Mossman adds that One of the enduring and saddest legacies of the apartheid system may be that no one White Black Coloured meaning of mixed race in South Africa or Asian can ever speak as a South African The problem however pre dates Apartheid significantly as South Africa is a country made up of communities that have always been linguistically and culturally diverse These cultures have all retained autonomy to some extent making a compilation such as the controversial Southern African Literatures by Michael Chapman difficult Chapman raises the question W hose language culture or story can be said to have authority in South Africa when the end of apartheid has raised challenging questions as to what it is to be a South African what it is to live in whether South Africa is mlg and if so what its mythos is what requires to be forgotten and what remembered as we scour the past in order to understand the present and seek a path forward into an unknown future South Africa has 11 national languages Afrikaans English Zulu Xhosa Sotho Pedi Tswana Venda SiSwati Tsonga and Ndebele Any definitive literary history of South Africa should it could be argued discuss literature produced in all 11 languages But the only literature ever to adopt characteristics that can be said to be national is Afrikaans Olivier argues Of all the literatures in South Africa Afrikaans literature has been the only one to have become a national literature in the sense that it developed a clear image of itself as a separate entity and that by way of institutional entrenchment through teaching distribution a review culture journals etc it could ensure the continuation of that concept Part of the problem is that English literature has been seen within the greater context of English writing in the world and has because of English s global position as not been seen as autonomous or indigenous to South Africa in Olivier s words English literature in South Africa continues to be a sort of extension of British or international English literature The African languages on the other hand are spoken across the borders of Southern Africa for example Tswana is spoken in Botswana and in Zimbabwe and in Lesotho South Africa s borders were drawn up by the British Empire and as with all other colonies these borders were drawn without regard for the people living within them Therefore in a history of South African literature do we include all Tswana writers or only the ones with South African citizenship Chapman bypasses this problem by including Southern African literatures The second problem with the African languages is accessibility because since the African languages are regional languages none of them can claim the readership on a national scale comparable to Afrikaans and English Sotho for instance while transgressing the national borders of the RSA is on the other hand mainly spoken in the Free State and bears a great amount of relation to the language of for example Zulu So the language cannot claim a national readership while on the other hand being international in the sense that it transgresses the national borders Olivier argues that There is no obvious reason why it should be unhealthy or abnormal for different literatures to co exist in one country each possessing its own infrastructure and allowing theoreticians to develop impressive theories about polysystems Yet political idealism proposing a unified South Africa a remnant of the colonial British approach has seeped into literary discourse and demands a unified national literature which does not exist and has to be fabricated It is unrealistic to ever think of South Africa and South African literature as homogenous now or in the near or distant future since the only reason it is a country at all is the interference of European colonial powers This is not a racial issue but rather has to do with culture heritage and tradition and indeed the constitution celebrates diversity Rather it seems more sensible to discuss South African literature as literature produced within the national borders by the different cultures and language groups inhabiting these borders Otherwise the danger is emphasising one literary system at the expense of another and more often than not the beneficiary is English with the African languages being ignored The distinction black and white literature is further a remnant of colonialism that should be replaced by drawing distinctions between literary systems based on language affiliation rather than race Afrikaans editMain article Afrikaans literature Afrikaans is a Germanic language closely related to Dutch It has its origins in the 17th century but was only officially recognised in 1875 when the Genootskap van Regte Afrikaners was established Afrikaans is spoken throughout South Africa and is the mother tongue of both whites and coloureds in the South African sense meaning a specific independent culture rather than the disparaging European or American use of the term The literary history is thus short but surprisingly vibrant The major literary histories are H P Van Coller s Perspektief en Profiel J C Kannemeyer s Geskiedenis van die Afrikaanse literatuur and Dekker s Afrikaanse Literatuurgeskiedenis Lewis Nkosi cf Cullhed 2006 18 claims that in South Africa there exists an unhealed I will not say incurable split between black and white writing This split occurs because Nkosi claims black writers are largely impervious for the most part to cultural movements which have exercised great influence in the development of white writing The Afrikaans literary system in contrast to the African languages engages with European artistic movements such as Symbolism expressionism modernism post modernism Dadaism and the like offering literature familiar to a European or American audience Poetry edit Some of the early names include Leipoldt and Langenhoven who wrote the national anthem Die Stem Early poetry often deal with the Anglo Boer War and it is only in the 1930s that poetry reaches a significant literary standard N P van Wyk Louw is the vanguard of the new movement called Dertigers along with his brother WEG Louw and Elisabeth Eybers although they were all to write in future literary periods Olivier notes Van Wyk Louw s predominance It was only in the Thirties that a fully developed theory about Afrikaans as a national literature was launched by the erudite poet N P van Wyk Louw in his two collections of essays Lojale verset 1939 and Berigte te velde 1939 Van Wyk Louw introduced international literary theories and movements into the South African literary scene on a much larger scale than any of his predecessors and his theory provided the intellectual and philosophical space within which poets and novelists could exercise their craft without fear of transgression in short it became the paradigm for Afrikaans literature Olivier D J Opperman started writing in the 1940s and was to have a particularly prominent role with his anthology Groot Verseboek The next major paradigm shift came in the 1960s with T T Cloete and Ingrid Jonker who after her death attained cult status Cloete et al discuss this literary watershed in Rondom Sestig Cloete is further noteworthy for his compilation Literere Terme en Teoriee 1992 which is one of the most encompassing works on literary theory available on the global market although written in Afrikaans Some modern poets of note include Joan Hambidge Hennie Aucamp Ernst van Heerden Antjie Krog and Gert Vlok Nel Breyten Breytenbach is regarded by many as one of the best if not the best Afrikaans poet He spent a number of years in prison for his political beliefs during apartheid and later lived in France Breytenbach s latest work Die windvanger was published in 2007 The major poetry anthologies are DJ Opperman s Groot Verseboek Foster and Viljoen s Poskaarte Gerrit Komrij s controversial Die Afrikaanse poesie in 1000 en enkele gedigte and Andre P Brink s Groot Verseboek a remake or reworking of Opperman s anthology Prose edit Being a predominantly agricultural society the plaasroman farm novel plays a prominent role in early as well as later novels One of the archetypes is C M van den Heever s Laat Vrugte which lay the foundations for parodies in the 1960s and later such as Etienne Leroux s Sewe dae by die Silbersteins Andre P Brink s Houd den bek and Eben Venter s Ek stamel ek sterwe Another example is Marie Linde s novel Onder bevoorregte mense published in 1925 and also issued in English as Among Privileged People 1 Even some English novels such as J M Coetzee s Disgrace remind one of the plaasroman As urbanisation became more prominent during the time of the two World Wars other forms emerged notably the dorpsroman town novel such as Lettie Viljoen s Karolina Ferreira Etienne van Heerden s Die Swye van Mario Salviati or Alexander Strachan s af Die Werfbobbejaan Afrikaans writing tends to be critical of conservative culture and during the Apartheid regime critical of politics as well Andre P Brink and Etienne Leroux deserve special mention Brink not only because he is accessible to English readers he writes in English and Afrikaans e g Duiwelskloof is available as Devil s Valley but also because the vast oeuvre he produced prose and drama sets him apart as arguably the greatest South African writer Leroux produced less but had a profound influence on the literary scene His characters are often outsiders and his satirical view on South African issues embodies alchemistic Jungian and Cabbalistic theories and philosophies with the novel reading like a palimpsest with different levels of meaning This style had a profound influence on writers such as Ingrid Winterbach Lettie Viljoen Alexander Strachan and Etienne van Heerden s magical realist novels With the war in Angola grensliteratuur border literature started playing an important role such as Dine van Zyl s af Slagoffers Christiaan Bakkes s Skuilplek and Alexander Strachan s n Wereld sonder grense After political changes in 1994 an emphasis on the past has become an important feature as South Africans attempted to make sense of their past of which Dan Sleigh s Eilande and Andre P Brink s Duiwelskloof are examples Triomf by Marlene van Niekerk deals with poor Afrikaners in a legendary suburb of Johannesburg where the Apartheid regime demolished the old black township Sophiatown in order to build houses for the white lower class Triomf has been translated into English by Leon de Kock Another writer who often regresses to earlier times is Andre P Brink e g Anderkant die Stilte in English available as The Other Side of Silence which is set during the German occupation of Namibia Andre Brink was the first Afrikaner writer to be banned by the government after he released the novel A Dry White Season about a white South African who discovers the truth about a black friend who dies in police custody In recent years gay and lesbian writing has also begun to feature e g Johann de Lange and Eben Venter s Ek stamel ek sterwe Political turmoil and the opening of South Africa s borders after the 1994 elections have resulted in many writers moving abroad or writing about their time spent overseas e g Jaco Fouche s Ryk van die Rawe Other contemporary issues include crime Jaco Fouche s Die avonture van Pieter Francken Etienne van Heerden s In stede van die liefde and others and other government issues such as corruption In short Afrikaans prose tends to be critical of the dominant ideologies and the government of the time the society inhabiting this space and the people living within this society From a European perspective Afrikaans prose produces works of a high standard and is artistically and intellectually capable of engaging with the best European and American writers English literature editProse edit One of the first literary works of note is Olive Schreiner s 1883 The Story of an African Farm which can be linked to Van den Heever s Laat Vrugte as a plaasroman The novel was a revelation in Victorian literature it is heralded by many as introducing feminism into the novel form However Mossman 1990 41 argues that The most frequently taught work of South African literature in American classrooms is Cry the Beloved Country 1948 by Alan Paton A possible reason for this is that it was made into a film starring James Earl Jones and it depicts a typical racist situation that fits well with American perceptions of South African society Paton also produced Too Late the Phalarope another text criticising Apartheid politics in particular the Immorality Act that forbade interracial sexual relations During the 1950s Drum became a hotbed of political satire fiction and essays giving a voice to urban black culture Around the same time future Nobel laureate Nadine Gordimer began publishing her first stories Her most famous novel July s People was released in 1981 depicting the collapse of white minority rule Athol Fugard s Tsotsi was also made into a film although Fugard is usually better known for his dramas Several influential black poets became prominent in the 1970s such as Mongane Wally Serote whose most famous work No Baby Must Weep gave insight into the everyday lives of black South Africans under Apartheid Lewis Nkosi essentially an essayist made a crossover to novel writing and published three novels Mating Birds 1986 Underground People 2002 and Mandela s Ego 2006 Another famous black novelist Zakes Mda transitioned from poetry and plays to becoming a novelist His novel The Heart of Redness won the 2001 Commonwealth Writers Prize and was made a part of the school curriculum across South Africa Miriam Tlali was the first black woman to publish a novel in South Africa with Muriel at Metropolitan 1975 also known as Between Two Worlds John Maxwell J M Coetzee was also first published in the 1970s He became internationally recognised in 1983 with his Booker Prize winning novel Life amp Times of Michael K His 1999 novel Disgrace won him his second Booker Prize as well as the 2000 Commonwealth Writers Prize He is also the recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2003 South African English writing has produced two Nobel Prize winners Nadine Gordimer and J M Coetzee Other prominent texts include Mine Boy by Peter Abrahams Alex La Guma s Walk in the Night Breyten Breytenbach s The True Confessions of an Albino Terrorist Marlene van Niekerk s Triomf Nadine Gordimer s Burger s Daughter Andre Brink s Dry White Season Richard Rive s Buckingham Palace District Six Andre Brink s Rumours of Rain Nadine Gordimer s July s People Sipho Sepamla s Ride on the Whirlwind and Mongane Serote s To every birth its blood David Lambkin also deserves mentioning The Hanging Tree reading like a Leroux novel with various Jungian and alchemistic substrates Drama edit Athol Fugard s Master Harold and the boys is a drama about race relations and Boesman and Lena depicts the hardships suffered by South Africa s poor Athol Fugard s plays have been regularly premiered in fringe theatres in South Africa London The Royal Court Theatre and New York Another noteworthy drama is Zakes Mda s We shall sing for the fatherland Recent plays have addressed the high levels of violent crime such as Lara Foot Newton s Tshepang Athol Fugard s Victory and Mpumelelo Paul Grootboom s Relativity Poetry edit Tony Ullyatt s The Lonely Art An Anthology includes South African English poetry English poetry in South Africa is often considered good by whether or not it criticises Apartheid or whether or not it depicts life as it is rather than the Afrikaans emphasis on literary merit taken from Russian Formalism and introduced by Van Wyk Louw Professor Chris Mann 2 is a poet presently associated with Rhodes University and has compiled a number of anthologies of poetry African languages editAlthough there are nine official African languages in South Africa most speakers are fluent in Afrikaans and English Coupled with the small market for writing in African languages this has led many African writers to write in English and Afrikaans The first texts produced by black authors were often inspired by missionaries and frequently deal with African history in particular the history of kings such as Chaka Modern South African writing in the African languages tends to play at writing realistically at providing a mirror to society and depicts the conflicts between rural and urban settings between traditional and modern norms racial conflicts and most recently the problem of AIDS In the first half of the 20th century epics largely dominated black male writing historical novels such as Sol T Plaatje s Mhudi An Epic of South African Native Life a Hundred Years Ago 1930 Thomas Mofolo s Chaka trans 1925 and epic plays including those of H I E Dhlomo or heroic epic poetry such as the work of Mazizi Kunene These texts evince black African patriarchy in its traditional form with men in authority often as warriors or kings and women as background figures of dependency and or mothers of the nation Cullhed 2006 21 Female literature in the African languages is severely limited because of the strong influence of patriarchy but over the last decade or two society has changed much and it can be expected that more female voices will emerge Zulu edit Some of the most prominent Zulu authors are BW Vilakazi Mazisi Kunene RRR Dhlomo HIE Dhlomo JL Dube Njabulo Ndebele Nimrod Ndebele EA Made and DBZ Ntuli Xhosa edit Ityala lamawele The Lawsuit of the Twins by S E K Mqhayi is the first extant novel in the Xhosa language It was published in 1914 by the Lovedale Press and has been a significant influence on subsequent isiXhosa literature Other prominent Xhosa authors are AC Jordan JJR Jolobe ZS Qangule KS Bongela Godfrey Mzamane Rubusana Peter Mtuze and Guybon Sinxo A female writer of note is Sindiwe Magona Her 1998 novel Mother to Mother deals with violence at the end of Apartheid through the killing of American student Amy Biehl Magona writes both in English and Xhosa Sesotho edit Some of the most prominent Sesotho authors are MKPD Maphala BM Khaketla N S Puleng Thomas Mofolo and Makali Isabella Mokitimi Pedi edit Some of the most prominent Pedi authors are OK Matsepe HDN Bopape HP Maredi SR Machaka MS Nchabeleng and Ramaila Tswana edit Some of the most prominent Tswana authors are Sol Plaatje DB Moloto DPS Monyaise SA Moroke Gilbert Modise MJ Ntsime Leetile Disang Raditladi who had a crater on Mercury named after him MD Mothoagae JHK Molao Literary festivals editSee also Book fairs in South Africa The Franschhoek Literary Festival was launched in 2007 3 and has been taking place once a year since then Its focus is on English speaking South African literature 3 that includes fiction non fiction and poetry Every year a few distinguished international authors are also invited 3 The Knysna Literary Festival first took place in 2009 with similar objectives 4 In contrast the Open Book Festival in Cape Town wants to be international with authors and audience from around the world 5 It also sees itself as a place where South African writers can promote themselves 5 The Open Book Festival was first launched in 2011 5 All three festivals also aim to draw children and young adults into reading by organizing special events for these audiences and funding projects such as school libraries 6 See also editList of South African writers List of South African poets South African poetry List of literary awards South African section Media of South AfricaReferences edit Van Coller 1998 p 26 Eve Jeanette 2003 A Literary Guide to the Eastern Cape Places and the Voices of Writers Juta and Company Ltd p 136 ISBN 978 1 919930 15 2 a b c about FRANSCHHOEK LITERARY FESTIVAL www flf co za Retrieved 26 August 2017 Knysna Literary Festival www knysnaliteraryfestival co za Retrieved 26 August 2017 a b c About Open Book Festival Open Book Festival Retrieved 27 February 2016 http www flf co za about http www knysnaliteraryfestival co za http openbookfestival co za about Further reading editAttridge Derek and Rosemary Jolly eds 1998 Writing South Africa Literature Apartheid and Democracy 1970 1995 Cambridge Cambridge University Press Baderoon Gabeba December 2015 Jain Andrea R ed I Compose Myself Lesbian Muslim Autobiographies and the Craft of Self Writing in South Africa Journal of the American Academy of Religion 83 4 Oxford Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Academy of Religion 897 915 doi 10 1093 jaarel lfv075 eISSN 1477 4585 ISSN 0002 7189 JSTOR 43900142 LCCN sc76000837 OCLC 1479270 Boehmer Elleke 1998 Endings and New Beginning South African Fiction in Transition Attridge and Jolly 43 56 Brink Andre and J M Coetzee eds 1986 A Land Apart A South African Reader London Faber and Faber Chapman Michael The Politics of Identity South Africa Story telling and Literary History Chapman Michael 1996 Southern African Literatures London Longman Coetzee J M 1988 White Writing On the Culture of Letters in South Africa New Haven Yale UP Cullhed C 2006 Grappling with Patriarchies Narrative Strategies of Resistance in Miriam Tlali s Writings Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis Studia Anglistica Upsaliensia 131 233 pp Uppsala Dekker G 1961 Afrikaanse literatuurgeskiedenis Cape Town Nasionale Boekhandel Bpk Fullerton Ian 1980 Politics and the South African Novel in English in Bold Christine ed Cencrastus No 3 Summer 1980 pp 22 23 Jenkins Elwyn National Character in South African Children s Literature Routledge 2006 ISBN 978 0 415 97676 3 Kannemeyer J C 1978 Die geskiedenis van die Afrikaanse literatuur Band I Pretoria Academica Kannemeyer J C 1983 Die geskiedenis van die Afrikaanse literatuur Band 2 Pretoria Academica Koch Jerzy 2015 A History of South African Literature Afrikaans Literature 17th 19th Centuries Pretoria Van Schaik Mossman Robert South African Literature A Global Lesson in One Country The English Journal Vol 79 No 8 December 1990 pp 41 43 Olivier Gerrit Afrikaans and South African literature Van Coller H P red 1998 Perspektief en profiel n Afrikaanse literatuurgeskiedenis I Pretoria J L van Schaik Van Coller H P red 1998 Perspektief en profiel n Afrikaanse literatuurgeskiedenis II Pretoria J L van Schaik Van Coller H P red 2006 Perspektief en profiel n Afrikaanse literatuurgeskiedenis III Pretoria J L van Schaik Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title South African literature amp oldid 1211870003, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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