Unusable pasts; scandalous lives; political betrayal, confession
and collaboration: reading narrative non-fiction across South
Africa's unfinished transition. Over the last decades, South Africa
has seen an outpouring of life writing and narrative non-fiction.
Authors like Panashe Chigumadzi, Jacob Dlamini, Mark Gevisser,
Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela, Antjie Krog, Sisonke Msimang, Njabulo
Ndebele, Jonny Steinberg and Ivan Vladislavic; have produced a
compelling and often controversial body of work, exploring the
country's ongoing political and social transition with great
ambition, texture and risk. Experiments with Truth is the first
book-length account of non-fiction in South African literature. It
reads the country's transition as refracted through an array of
documentary modes that are simultaneously refashioned and blurred
into each other: long-form analytic journalism and reportage;
experiments in oral history, microhistory and archival
reconstruction; life-writing, memoir and the essay. It traces the
strange and ethically complex process by which real people, places
and events are shuffled, patterned and plotted in long-form prose
narrative. While holding in mind the imperatives of testimony and
witness so important to the struggle for liberation and the Truth
and Reconciliation Commission, the case studies here are
increasingly drawn to a post-TRC aesthetic: works that engage with
difficult, inappropriate or unusable elements of the past, and the
unfinished project of social reconstruction in SouthAfrica. The
author examines non-fictions that are speculative, formally
innovative and sometimes experimental, rather than informational or
narrowly journalistic; that explore difficult subjects like
collaboration, complicity, confession - and have embedded within
them their own reflections on the problems of narrating within a
scene of unresolved difference. In this way, southern African
materials are placed in a global context, and in dialogue with
otherimportant non-fictional traditions that have emerged at
moments of social rupture and transition. Hedley Twidle is a
writer, teacher and researcher based in the English Department at
the University of Cape Town. He specialises in twentieth-century,
southern African and world literatures, as well as creative
non-fiction and the environmental humanities. His essay collection,
Firepool: Experiences in an Abnormal World, was published in 2017.
General
Imprint: |
James Currey
|
Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Series: |
African Articulations |
Release date: |
April 2019 |
First published: |
2019 |
Authors: |
Hedley Twidle
|
Dimensions: |
234 x 156 x 20mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Hardcover
|
Pages: |
265 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-84701-188-6 |
Categories: |
Books
|
LSN: |
1-84701-188-8 |
Barcode: |
9781847011886 |
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