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Welcome indeed to our South African special issue.
It is also a bumper holiday issue, so we nod our season’s
greetings with vacation photographs from the poet Tolu Ogunlesi.
Writer and journalist Molara Wood advances this end-of-year mood,
bringing her now familiar annual survey of favourite readings by
African writers to this issue of African Writing. Wood’s ‘Books
of the Year’ is usually an authoritative sample of what
a fair proportion of African writers have read in the given year.
From Rudolph Okonkwo, in our new photo gallery, we have an engaging
offering of conference photographs from the recently concluded Christopher
Okigbo International Conference in the US.
But it is to South Africa we must go for most of
our features this issue. Special thanks to Chimurenga Editor Ntone
Edjabe, Ben Williams of Book SA Daily, the supremely resourceful
Victor Dlamini, Mark Espin of Centre for the Book, publisher Rose
Francis, poets Chris Mann and Lebo Mashile, novelists Zukiswa Wanner
and Alex Smith, National English Language Museum researcher Andrew
Martin, and others, for believing in our project and offering their
time, resources and other invaluable assistance in what was mostly
a labour of love – this special South African issue of African
Writing. Special thanks yet again to Zukiswa Wanner and Alex
Smith for their representative AW profile of women writers in South
Africa, involving some research and many interviews. Thanks to publishers
Umuzi and African Perspectives for access to some of the writers.
Not long ago, Chimurenga had its special Nigerian issue, ‘We
Are All Nigerians!’ In this special South African issue
of AW, you could be forgiven for thinking all of African literature
now happens in South Africa. So impressive has been the development
and excellence of its post-apartheid writing. Yes – We
are all South Africans now!
In addition to the many interesting contributors
form South Africa, this issue is significantly empowered by Ghanaian
writer Manu Herbstein’s special investigative report on the
British Council’s 2007 slavery abolition anniversary events
in his country. Herbstein is the author of Ama: A Story of the
Atlantic Slave Trade, a critically acclaimed novel. We are
also paying tribute in this issue to the literary lives of four
African writers – the Nigerians Idzia Ahmad and Cyprian Ekwensi,
both now departed, South African poet and senior literary figure
Don Mattera and the Kenyan novelist Ngugi wa Thiong’o, who
is 70 years, January 2008. Special thanks to Amanze Akpuda, Uzor
Maxim Uzoatu and Emilia Ilieva, for their labour on the tributes.
Please locate the AW Issue Nos. 1 and 2, included in our archives.
The second issue profile especially offers an extensive and frequently
challenging range of contributors to the making and development
of African writing in Britain.
In African Writing, we are constantly
reviewing the services we offer our readers to identify possibilities
for improvement and growth. Reader reactions and letters are useful
ways by which we access our progress. Please find the time to respond
to the Readership
Survey,
which is one of our new online features. For on-going concerns and
extended reactions to
features and operations, or regarding any matter of concern in African
literature, consider using the more elaborate set-up of our
Readers Network.
A letter to the Publisher on publishing and subscription matters,
or the Editor on editorial and submission matters might also serve
your purpose. The addresses are publisher@african-writing.com and
editor@african-writing.com
Another new feature in AW is the Image Library,
where our online visitors can browse the photographs, illustrations,
cartoons and other art works provided by AW contributors. Look out
for the new African Writing Blogs. African Writing Publisher Chuma
Nwokolo and South African novelist Zukiswa Wanner are our first
two bloggers. We expect to add more writers from Africa and its
diaspora in our list. We will consider all approaches to African
Writing for this purpose, but this will not guarantee acceptance.
There will be other additions to our online services and further
operational changes as we seek to strengthen our structures and
improve our systems towards becoming all we want to be. Welcome
to Issue No 3 of African Writing.
The Editor
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