73 research outputs found
Notes towards a history of Khoi literature
This article puts forward a revisionist history of Khoi literature, and also presents a number of translated Khoi narratives that have not been available in English before. Compared to the large volume of Bushman literature and scholarship, there has been very little Khoi literature and engagement with it, and an argument is presented to account for this gap in South African cultural history. Until now, the major source of Khoi literature was Wilhelm Bleek’s Reynard the Fox in South Africa (1864), and this text is critically interrogated as a limiting version of Khoi orature. An alternative corpus of Khoi narratives is presented that was originally published in Leonard Schultze’s Aus Namaland und Kalahari (1907).Web of Scienc
Little perpetrators, witness-bearers and the young and the brave: towards a post-transitional aesthetics
The aesthetic choices characterizing work produced during the transition to democracy have
been well documented. We are currently well into the second decade after the 1994 election -
what then of the period referred to as the 'second transition'? Have trends consolidated,
hardened, shifted, or have new 'post-transitional' trends emerged? What can be expected of the
future 'born free' generation of writers and readers, since terms such as restlessness, dissonance
and disjuncture are frequently used to describe the experience of constitutional democracy as it
co-exists with the emerging new apartheid of poverty? Furthermore, what value is there in
identifying post-transitional aesthetic trends?DHE
Cracked vases and untidy seams: Narrative structure and closure in the truth and reconciliation commission and South African Fiction
Textual Subjects in Motion: Letters, Literature and Print Medium in an Indian-South African Exchange (1928-1946)
This article traces an epistolary exchange between South Africa and India that was animated by the circulation of print media and literary texts. The exchange – between the South African archivist, poet and social historian MK Jeffreys and the Indian statesmen and scholars VS Srinivasa Sastri and P Kodanda Rao – is read as forming part of a larger web of personal and political relations and textual traffic that contributed to the production of Indian Ocean public spheres. Through engagement with this particular case study, the article seeks to contribute to the scholarly turn from explorations of relations between ‘centre’ and ‘periphery’ or along a North-South axis toward elaborating those engaging South-South connections within the Indian Ocean arena
Reading the Maternal Voice in Sindiwe Magona's To My Children's Children and Mother to Mother
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