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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Profiles
8 South
African Women Writers
Photographs: (except
Gcina Mhlope) by Victor Dlamini |
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Gabeba
Baderoon |
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Gabeba is the author of The Dream in the Next Body(2005),
The Museum of Ordinary Life (2005), and A Hundred
Silences (2006). The Dream in the Next Body
was named a Notable Book of 2005 by the Sunday Independent
in South Africa and was a Sunday Times Recommended
Book. A Hundred Silences was selected for Exclusive
Books Homebru in 2006, and was short-listed for the 2007 University
of Johannesburg Prize. In 2005, Gabeba received the DaimlerChrysler
Award for South African Poetry and held the Guest Writer Fellowship
at the Nordic Africa Institute, the second person after Ama Ata
Aidoo to receive this honour. Gabeba is the recipient of a Civitella
Ranieri Fellowship for 2008. Her poetry appears in the anthologies
Worldscapes (Oxford University Press, 2005), Ten Hallam
Poets (Mews Press, 2005), Voices from All Over
(Oxford University Press, 2006) and Birds in Words
(Umuzi/Random House, 2006) and in journals in South Africa, the
United States and Europe, and in translation in Karavan and
Post Scriptum (Stockholm), Cumhuriyet (Istanbul)
and Adamar (Madrid). The Silence Before Speaking,
a volume of her poetry translated into Swedish is forthcoming
from Tranan publishers. Her fiction appears in Chimurenga
magazine, Twist, a short story anthology (Oshun
Books, 2006) and Cape Town Calling (Tafelberg,
2007). Gabeba is also a scholar, and has written for the media.
Details of her academic writing and her articles in the Sunday
Independent, Mail & Guardian, Oprah and Real Simple
magazines can also be found on gabeba.com.
Gabeba has been a featured poet in the 16 Days of Activism readings
with Malika Ndlovu, Diana Ferrus, Sandile Dikeni and Antjie Krog,
and in festivals such as Poetry on the Road in Bremen, Weltklang
in Berlin, Poetry Africa in Durban and the Stockholm Poetry Festival.
In 2006, Gabeba read at Poetry International in Rotterdam, the
Bristol Poetry Festival and Poetry International on the South
Bank in London. She has also read in prestigious literary series
such as the Achebe Fellowship Series at Bard College, the Pittsburgh
Contemporary Writers Series at the University of Pittsburgh, and
with Cecil Giscombe in the Allegheny Mountain Series at Pennsylvania
State University. In 2007 she has read at the Spier Poetry Festival
in Cape Town, curated by Antjie Krog, the Winternachten festival
in Aruba and Curacao, the Calabash International Literary Festival
in Jamaica and with Galway Kinnell in the Off the Shelf festival
in Sheffield on 13 October.
She will be one of the featured writers at the Franschoek Literary
Festival in 2008.
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Among the current crop of writers in South Africa, Kopano Matlwa
stands uniquely head and shoulders above the rest. This grounded
twenty two year old author of provocative novel Coconut
about black South African youths’ loss of identity in their
highly Westernised nation highlights what can happen to African
children when they realize that in a world that is black-and-white,
life can be cruel when one is not black enough to be black but
too black to be white.
Matlwa is not only the youngest European
Literary Award winner to come out of South Africa but in addition,
continues to manage a hectic writer’s schedule of book readings,
literary fairs et al, with a full-time schedule as a medical student
at University of Cape Town.
She cites Zimbabwean Tsitsi Dangarembgwa’s
Nervous Conditions as one of her favourite books.
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Kopano
Matlwa |
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Mary
Watson |
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It is a general sentiment among writers that academics ironically
make for lousy writers. Award-winning writer and film scholar
Mary Watson may just be proof that this is a nonsensical statement
though. Among Watson’s literary achievements are: a Meritorius
Publication Award for her collection of short stories, Moss,
and a Caine Prize for African Writing for her short story
Jungfrau. Andre Brink has said of her stories: “I
can honestly say that I have seldom, in South African literature,
come across short stories of such suggestive power as these.”
Watson is currently completing her Ph.D. in Film Studies at
the University of Cape Town, where she is also a lecturer in Film
Studies. She is also working on her first novel.
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In ‘Mouthful of Stones’, a poem
by Phillippa Yaa de Villiers’ she states:
‘I am a writer,
A writer’s daughter.
My mind holds words
Like a hand holds water.’
And that is exactly what she is. Like most writers, de Villiers
has always been a writer. de Villiers recalls that she started
writing from the age of eleven but having studied drama at Rhodes
University, she was an actress from 1990 and only became more
serious about the art of writing in 1998. It was then that she
got back to writing. Starting with screenplays, she is credited
with being one of the screenwriters for a four part series with
Swedish television for a four part series entitled ‘Score’;
Backstage, a South African soapie; Tsha Tsha, an
SABC television drama and being part of the original screenwriting
team of Soul Buddies and Soul City, dramas about
HIV/AIDS (the former a youth drama). Throughout this period, she
was still writing her poetry. It was in 2005 though, that she
became one of the celebrated poets on South Africa’s spoken
word scene. With performances at the Women’s Festival in
2005, she followed her performance with publishing a collection
of her poetry, entitled Taller than Buildings,
in November 2006.
This daughter of an Australian mother and a Ghanaian father who
was raised by an Afrikaner family in South Africa from a very
early age (her mother was from a conservative religious family
and in those days it was not done to have a child with a black
man) has used the adversities of being a biracial child raised
by a white family in an apartheid South Africa, not as a crutch
as some would do but as a weapon to strengthen her art. In August,
she wrote and performed a one woman play at the Market Theatre
to critical acclaim. The play, which centred on her confusion
about her identity at a young age, played to full house for the
length of time it was staged.
As a follow up to her success in September, de Villiers wowed
the crowds at the much-celebrated poetry festival, Durban’s
Poetry Africa in early October this year together with the likes
of Napo Masheane, Chirikure Chirikure and musician and poet, Chiwoniso
Maraire.
Without taking a break, together with Masheane and Lebogang
Mashile, they formed part of the delegation from South Africa
that attended and performed at London’s Word Power International
Festival of Black Literature. From London, de Villiers went to
Birmingham where she recorded some of her poetry in collaboration
with Fred Wisdom. She is currently working on another anthology
of her poetry that she hopes to have out in 2008 as well as youth
novel on a middle class black child dealing with the legacy of
slavery. Having been acknowledged and applauded on the local scene,
de Villiers is clearly one of the writers to watch out for on
the international scene in the next few years.
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Phillippa
Yaa De Villiers |
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Maxine
Case |
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Maxine Case was born in Cape Town into a family of readers and
writers. Her mother is the well-known children’s author,
Dianne Case, and her sister Bonita also writes. She never planned
becoming a writer, but somehow found she couldn’t stay away
from reading, and finally, from writing. After school, she studied
advertising and then completed an IMM diploma. After a brief stint
in the corporate world, her nature won out and she followed her
passion for books – cutting her teeth in the publishing
industry by “doing everything” for Kwagga Publishers.
She later freelanced as a project manager for authors both locally
and abroad ghosting several books as diverse as children’s
books, religious tracts and the inevitable self-help books. She
found herself increasing doing more and more rewriting and less
and less editing; and so inspired by this, she started to write
her own work. She was the deputy editor of Indulge, a
woman’s magazine published in Nigeria. Just under a year
ago, she joined NB Publishers as the marketing and promotions
co-ordinator.
Her first published work, a short story called “Homing
Pigeons” was included in African Compass: New writing
from Southern Africa 2005, a collection published by New Africa
Books. Maxine Case was selected as the winner of the Commonwealth
Writers' Prize – Africa region in the category Best First
Book for her debut novel, All We Have Left Unsaid
published in June 2007.
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Rayda Jacobs has established herself as a writer of accessible
and thought-provoking novels. Her first two novels, Eyes
of the Sky and The Slave Book, are set
at the Cape at the beginning of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
respectively. Her third novel, Sachs Street, is
again set in contemporary Cape Town, in the historic Bo-Kaap, with
flashbacks to the fifties. Her fourth novel, Confessions
of a Gambler won the Sunday Times Fiction Award
and the Herman Charles Bosman Prize for 2004 and is currently being
made into a movie.
Jacobs has a penchant for exploring the intricate
conflicts and interactions between South Africans of different colours
and cultural backgrounds. She also reveals unexpected aspects of
the reality of the Cape Muslim community to which she returned in
the early nineties, after a 27-year stay in Canada.
Through her short films, newspaper columns, radio
programmes and talks, Jacobs has developed a reputation as an open-minded
explorer of the rich cultural and religious heritages found in the
Western Cape. |
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Rayda
Jacobs |
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Lebogang
Mashile |
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Although
known on the African literary scene as the 2006 Noma award winner
for her poetry anthology, In the Rhythm of Ribbon,
Lebogang Mashile is so much more than this. As part of the now defunct
Feelah Sistah collective (together with Napo Masheane, Ntsiki Mazwai
and Mysha Jenkins), Mashile can take her share of credit for taking
poetry from being an underground phenomenon to becoming a part of
South Africa’s pop culture scene post 1994. Mashile shies
away from the ‘starving artist’ label and believes that
artists should ensure that their art works for them to achieve greater
goals and give them better lives. A regular at Poetry Africa, (she
performed there in 2003, 2004 and 2006), Mashile is best known in
South Africa as the woman who took no prisoners as she went to the
depths and breadths of South Africa in her quest to bring different
cultural habits to light as well as questioning some of the so-called
‘cultural’ behaviours that seem to subjugate women in
her weekly documentary L’atitude’. Her show, which last
screened in 2006 and always ended with Mashile reciting a poem,
garnered much kudos from womenkind (I recall a young girl in Cape
Town telling me that what she learnt most from L’atitude was
that being a woman is okay) for being empathetic without shying
away from difficult issues be it virginity testing or polygamy.
It is this passion she showed on L’atitude that she has also
brought to the world of print as columnist for South African women
magazine, True Love.
A busy woman, Mashile continues to perform at various events; was
the Master of ceremonies at the 10th Time of the Writer Festival
in Durban in March 2007; was a guest at the Berlin Book Fair; and
attended and performed at London’s Word Power International
Festival of Black Literature with Masheane and de Villiers. She
is currently working on her next anthology, out in 2008. A revolutionary
as a poet, Mashile is also currently working with celebrated South
African choreographer, Sylvia Glasser as she tries to take poetry
to work with different mediums and therefore bring the art to a
wider audience. The show, with a working title of ‘Moving
into Poetry’ is expected on our stages sometime in 2008.
She dreams of starting a multinational multimedia house and there
is no doubt she will achieve her dreams because, with her talent
and ambition, Mashile, already celebrated, is clearly yet to reach
her peak as an artist. |
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Photo: Ogilvy - Dawn Voice
Out |
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If there is any one writer on the South African landscape who
should be credited for trying to create a culture of reading among
the youth, Gcina Mhlope is she. With her children’s fairy
tales published in both English and isiXhosaMat, Mhlope is a drawcard
at Book Fairs for the children.
In 2000 she released an award-winning storytelling CD called
Fudukazi's Magic for German audiences. She has also written
both story and music in collaboration with guitarist, Bheki Khoza,
for the Animated Tales of the World TV series.
In 2001 her CD and book of Nozincwadi Mother of Books
was produced as part of her nationwide reading road show to South
African rural schools. Her work has received awards from BBC Africa
Service for Radio Drama, The Fringe First Award in the Edinburgh
Festival, the Josef Jefferson Award in Chicago, and OBBIE in New
York.
Yet, she does not only limit her writing to children’s
books but also keeps the adult audience enthralled with her poetry,
short stories and plays.
Gcina Mhlophe has received Honorary Doctorates from the London
Open University as well as the University of Natal.
photo: Paul Weinberg/www.ukzn.ac.za
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Gcina
Mhlope |
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