Alex Smith
Amanze Akpuda
Amitabh Mitra
Ando Yeva
Andrew Martin
Aryan Kaganof
Ben Williams
Bongani Madongo
Chielozona Eze
Chris Mann
Chukwu Eke
Chuma Nwokolo
Colleen Higgs
Colleen C. Cousins
Don Mattera
Elizabeth Pienaar
Elleke Boehmer
Emilia Ilieva
Fred Khumalo
Janice Golding
Lebogang Mashile
Manu Herbstein
Mark Espin
Molara Wood
Napo Masheane
Nduka Otiono
Nnorom Azuonye
Ola Awonubi
Petina Gappah
Sam Duerden
Sky Omoniyi
Toni Kan
Uzor M. Uzoatu
Valerie Tagwira
Vamba Sherif
Wumi Raji
Zukiswa Wanner
Credits:
Ntone Edjabe
Rudolf
Okonkwo
Tolu Ogunlesi
Yomi Ola
Molara Wood
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Ben
Williams and Bongani Makondo are well known names in South African
arts journalism. In whatever country they ply their trade, arts
journalists are usually fairly informed on the state of the arts,
including its politics, so African Writing is delighted that these
two contributors accepted the invitation to assist our readers in
feeling the pulse of the contemporary in South African arts and
culture.
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Bongani
Madongo |
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:
To an informed outsider South Africa seems almost an impossible
balancing act for the simple reporter or editor in cultural journalism,
with its extreme history and many political, racial and other fault
lines. What have been the special challenges of your experience
in SA arts journalism? |
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Bongani:
Several.
One, the lack of a coherent, or even incoherent one national,
all encompassing culture. To the outsiders, yes we are this
one monolithic Mandela’s Midnight Children, under a
Rugby winning squad aura or flag, but on the ground, there’s
almost nothing like a South African arts and culture.
Thus, no South African ‘arts journalism’
per se.
We still exists as black and white, rich and poor, underground
cultural offshoots, mostly driven by both children of the
poorest of the poor and the richest of the wealthy.
The two disparities, do meet, especially
in expressions such as hip-hop or what they refer to us African/
vernacular hip-hop, which they call Kasie Style.
What’s clear though, is that South African arts journalists
– most, showbiz reporters, and never cultural writers-
display lack of class and racial, or even what I refer to
as “style” analysis.
We rely a lot on Press Releases. The art
of exploring the country in its diversity is dead- that is
if it ever lived.
Two: lack of training, journalistic training.
The big media houses, which constitute the mainstream, thus
the most influential voice(s) on this country, have no interest
at all in investing in the training of arts journalism.
They do, however, have big budgets to cover,
stalk and engage with emerging tabloid stars, celebrities
“on the come”, and cheap gossip pertaining to
the lives of these upcoming/quickly fading stars. I must say
though, that’s not a uniquely South African problem. |
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Ben:
For me, the challenges have to do with the limits of the medium
as much as anything: arts journalism online has a short reach
in South Africa, where access to the web, while on the increase,
remains quite limited. BOOK SA's main purpose is to make connections
among those who are generating the country's vast literary
output - wonderfully overflowing, everywhere one looks - and
to help build the audience for local writing. This entails
everything from covering local literature as news (we call
ourselves an "SA Lit Daily") to assisting writers
and publishers to assert themselves online more effectively.
It's quite an exciting project; with each increment of growth,
we feel a sense of accomplishment. So building an audience
that will consume what you're producing is a key hurdle, much
less deciding on what to report and how. One thing that certainly
works in our favour with respect to the latter is South Africans'
general tolerance of one another, despite the "fault
lines" noted in the question. Audiences from all walks
of SA life can be built, if slowly; and their members
will be respectful, engaging, thought-provoking - not rancorous.
One rarely hears literary discussions conducted with ill-will
here. |
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:
It does seem to us also from our perhaps simplistic outsider perspective,
looking at the ‘special interests’ character of much
SA writing, with the differently developing communities of writers
and readers proclaiming their different but equal rights to resources
for their different languages and perspectives, that the trumpeted
‘Rainbow Nation’ of the Mandela-Bishop Tutu reconciliation
experience is not yet available in the bookshops and performance
venues where Literature happens. Is this a fair assessment or are
there some notable writers and performers writing and performing
across these divides? What are the critical and public responses
to them? |
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Bongani:
The Mandela-Tutu Rainbow was a mirage from the word go.
Still born, feel good racial soundbite politics at best. But what
exactly is your question? Is South Africa’s literary stories
expressing the two old men’s political wishes? Is that what
you are asking?
Or, to rephrase, are writers tackling the racial
inclusivity the country prides itself in achieving? Lemme play devil’s
advocate here: why should they? Writers should tell stories they
see and feel, or those they fantasise about . . . dreams . . .not
what we critics and the outside world wish to read. |
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Ben:
A marketplace-based study - books on shelves, books being sold -
might conclude that a literary duopoly operates in South Africa:
the white Afrikaans and English markets are dominant, and thus catered
for above all others. This can largely be chalked up to a combination
of economic inequality - whites still have the most money - and
the legacy of whites' hegemony over resources in the past, which
necessarily extends into the sphere of literary and cultural production
today. But from the point of view of many, if not most, South African
writers, performers and small publishers, I suspect, the world of
literature is flat, democratic, with space for anyone who picks
up a pen or utters a poem. And this world, thankfully - a burgeoning
place - has begun to influence the status quo. Thus the work of
Bongani Madondo, say, or Lebo Mashile, permeates to the farthest
reaches of cultural consumerdom (yes, including the white suburbs!);
and meanwhile "underground" movements such as those driven
by Aryan Kaganof are bubbling
merrily through all manner of pipelines (yes, even in the black
townships!). So future prospects for literature and performance
as lekgotla space for all South Africans appear bright,
even in terms of commercial performance. Those hoping to see a unifying
aesthetic forged in this space ( lekgotla="court"
or "meeting place") will be disappointed; those seeking
talent's pageant won't. |
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:
Are you satisfied with the coverage of literature in the
South African media, and in which print and broadcast media would
a visitor, including an online visitor, go to find the creative arts?
Any new media developments of significant value to the arts? |
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Bongani:
It is not up to me to be satisfied with the coverage. Perhaps
because I am insider and a cynic to boot, but I do not rely on the
media to update myself or be educated insofar as fresh stories,
new authors, or challenging themes are concerned.
As a reader, one must acknowledge though that yes,
South Africa has a wide – don’t know how deep- reviewing
culture and space in the mass media. The best is Sunday
Times ’ Lifestyle section –where, I must declare,
I work, even though I do not necessarily focus on literature- the
Mail
& Guardian and an wonderful online platform called, Lit.Net,
sponsored by the bank, Absa.
There are also great, brave blogs and websites
such as the one run by a lone ranger in promoting South African
Literature online, Victor
Dlamini. |
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Ben:
I'm certainly not satisfied. The scarcity of literature-oriented
journalism in South Africa is one of the main reasons BOOK SA was
founded. (Though it's undoubtedly self-serving, I'd like to include
our iniative as a "new media development of significant value
to the arts". Find us at http://book.co.za!)
The fact is that space given to local literature
in the mass media is tiny. This is changing a bit for the better,
thanks to the current "local is sexy" Zeitgeist (produced
largely from litres of sweat off writers' brows and the frantic
efforts of their publishers), and to the commercial viability of
more and more local books. But coverage isn't nearly as good or
creative as it could be. Television is practically a write-off -
I haven't seen a local book featured on SA TV ever (but then again
I don't watch too much telly...) - and radio stations will typically
give 1-3 hours a week to books, not nearly enough (in my, erm, book)
Among newspapers, the best book reviews (in English)
are to be found in the Sunday Independent (currently
available online to subscribers only) and The
Weekender (most reviews free online, with the Mail
& Guardian coming in third - although the quality
of the M&G's writing occasionally sees it leapfrog the other
two. The worst paper for book reviews, to my mind, is the Sunday
Times, which, being the largest newspaper in the country, has
the resources to be the best, but which hardly accords any space
to local books - and this despite the fact that it's the sponsor
of SA's largest literary awards, the R75 000 Fiction Prize and the
equally lucrative Alan Paton Award for nonfiction.
Among smaller print media, it's hard to do better
than Chimurenga,
our top arts "little magazine"; and for poetry Carapace
is still the best, despite the fact that it's becoming positively
venerable!
Online, Litnet
is a splendid literary resource and news outlet; iBhuku
punches far above its weight; KZN
Literary Tourism is the most promising newcomer; and the archives
at the University
of KwaZulu Natal's Centre for the Creative Arts are a treasure
trove. I'd also like to point readers to The
Victor Dlamini Literary Podcast, for its singular contribution
to local letters: writing, photography and audio broadcasting braided
into a single literary experience. |
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:
What kind of institutional assistance
from government, business and other agencies are available to support
SA writing and its contributors from the press.
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Bongani:
Almost none from business other than this ABSA Litnet thing,
even they only sponsor a platform and not writers’ grants.
There’s a National Arts Council that offers literary grants
as part of a wider categories of grants intended for other aspects
of the arts. Yet, even these are less than crumbs.
Some poets have published their anthologies through
independent publishers this way, so we should not pull up our noses.
But the department of Arts and Culture has several
well meaning and visionary personnel within their staff. Some of
them published novelists and poets . . . lately, they’ve been
talking a pretty good rap. As to whether there are actual programmes
I don’t know. If there were, I would be in the know. |
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Ben: Like
artists everywhere, South African writers have to work hard to attract
financial or other support from third parties. The SA government
throws a few bones through the Department of Arts and Culture, the
National Lottery and - perhaps best of all - the National Library
and its Community
Publishing Project; there are a few corporate-sponsored events
and a healthy number of awards; and local universities make bursaries
available for creative writing courses, etc. All in all, I get the
impression that the pickings are too slim, however: a lot more could
be done to support the literary arts from those who have the cash.
In fact, most of the writers I know who have found support, found
it one way or another through Europe and its various funding agencies.
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:
Is arts journalism very much a labour of love in South Africa as
in most countries, full of literature enthusiasts, writers and would-be
writers, and if so what opportunities are available for training
and the reward of excellence?
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Bongani:
Abso -bloody- lutely!
T’is a labour of love.
Sad thing is: I do not feel this love anymore.
To pilfer blues pioneer BB. King, the thrill’s gone baby!
The love is gone. No “diaraby” any more.
My lover seems to have disappeared into the Atlantic
Ocean, in one of those ocean liners that capsize on their way to
America.
It is all American showbiz all the way; rather,
American showbiz cargo ship sinking midway to the new world: unrealised
dreams. Don’t get me wrong: I too, love American cultural
expressions.
As an international African – the emphasis
on the latter- I believe our arts journalism should be creating
some sort of robust, localised arty-tude, define or fail
to define itself, constantly dialogue with itself, and not come
across as “counter”-fakes, purchased by People,
Heat and Hello magazines. Which is the case, in South
African write now: We are on sale.
Yes, we need more than training: we need a new
state of mind. But arts journalists are like most professionals
today in this country: too greedy and too lazy. They all want to
be the celebrities they write about.
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Ben:
Strictly a labour of love. There are few journalists indeed who
are able to focus solely on literary matters, to the exclusion of
other beats. The just-established award
for excellence in literary journalism will hopefully help incentivise
greater interest in the field, along with higher standards and so
on, but the fact is that journalists need to be quite flexible in
what they're prepared to cover to make a living here! |
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:
South Africa is the only African country
with two Nobel Literature Prize winners, and many of its other writers
are well known and respected all over the world, even in translation.
There is also talk of a post-apartheid literature boom or renaissance,
with many new writers being published, winning national and international
prizes. Is it a true reflection of the contemporary in African writing
to say it is all going South Africa's way, and all bright and happy
down under? |
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Bongani:
I am working on the story aiming to explore if we are experiencing
a Renaissance, or what I call “New Negro Lit. Boom”
I will inform you of the results of my research, much later. |
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Ben:
It may very well be true to say "all is bright and happy down
under" - more South African writers are enjoying success than
ever before, some of them at unprecedented levels (John van de Ruit's
Spud has sold over 100 000 copies in SA alone,
for instance) - but I don't think it's the case that a major continental
shift is underway. Perhaps this is because so many of the writers
I know look toward other African countries, not SA, for inspiration.
Locally, the new generation of Nigerian and Kenyan writers are held
in great esteem; and it seems to me that they more than hold their
own, from an international perspective, against the rising South
African tide.
That said, it is a genuine tide with a full-throated roar, and a
long way to run before any hint of an ebb. A big question on many
writers' minds here is - When will the tide overwhelm the national
boundary, and the inundation spread to more parts of the world?
Only time will tell whether we have the combination of quality and
persevearance to see it happen (not to mention the negotiating skills:
we're sorely in need of two-way rights agreements with European
and American publishers).
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:
What additional information or thoughts
on South African writing or the media coverage of it would you like
to share with readers of
magazine? |
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Bongani:
That, there are new writers coming up, and our stories
and heroes are much more diverse than Nelson Mandela, Arch Tutu,
Nadine Gordimer, JM Coetzee, blah blah.
But also, I think this country needs to start exploring,
in its fictions, the issue of feminism, lesbianism and homosexuality,
for example involving African males, or even to push it a bit deeper,
African males and white male unions. Those kind of previously “taboo”
subjects.
I am for the breaking of the walls/perception kind
of literature, and to that effect and quite glad to say there are
authors I personally know and have engaged in discussions with,
doing exactly that. The late Sello K. Duiker for instance, and now
guys such as Fred Khumalo in his latest novel, 7 Steps To
Heaven (Jacana Media).
It is exciting . . . but such bravery is quite
rare in our literary landscape.
We should all get out of our ghettos and explore
ourselves much deeper.
To the world: apologies for disappointing you. There’s just
no romance about my country I am prepared to share with you.
Try next door. Try India . . . there’s always
“spicy” magic realism going on in there, isn’t
it? Or so the West tell us.
Thank You. |
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Ben:
In terms of trends to watch out for, indigenous-language publishing's
time may have come in South Africa. The marketplace for all kinds
of literature has built up quite a head of steam over the past ten
years - just enough, perhaps, to assure the commercial viability
of novels and poetry collections published exclusively in Zulu,
Xhosa, Sotho and Tswana on a relatively mass scale. The idea has
been around since Sol Plaatjie's Mhudi, I daresay
(the first English novel by a black South African, published in
1930; Plaatjie also translated Shakespeare into Tswana), but has
consistently met resistance - commercial, ideological and otherwise.
Now, the SA government is backing several indigenous language publishing
projects; and the demand from readers for original works in the
languages mentioned above has grown stronger. Children's literature
is leading the way here, with numerous indigenous-language childrens
books achieving respectable sales levels already. ( uTshepo Mde
comes immediately to mind.) It's quite possible that, in a few years,
we'll have cause to discuss the South African book/boek/incwadi
industry.
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Bongani
Madondo is the highly
regarded Profile and Arts writer in The Sunday Times, South Africa.
He has also written for Mail&Guardian, City Press, The
Sunday Independent and Sowetan Sunday World, focusing
on South African literature, music and film. Professional honours
include Vodacom Features Writer of the Year (Gauteng, 2004), Arts
and Culture Journalist of the Year (2003) and The Steve Biko Journalism
Fellowship (1999). He recently published a book of his Sunday
Times arts journalism pieces. |
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Ben
Williams moved to
South Africa in 1995 from the USA. He received his education both
in Chicago and Cape Town. He has been involved in South African
literary developments for over a decade, and co-directed, with Antjie
Krog, the 2004 Tradewinds International Literature Festival in Cape
Town. He is the publishing editor of BOOK
Southern Africa, a "web 2.0" initiative designed to
build a wider audience for South African fiction, poetry and literary
non-fiction. He lives in Cape Town with his wife.
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