Apartheid Literature
A Brief Introduction to the Apartheid
After much conflict, in 1910, the Afrikaner community
(the descendants of Dutch traders, live stock farmers and religious refugees
from west Europe) and the British established a nations-state called the
Union of South Africa. The National Party was formed by the Afrikaners
and the British formed the South African Party. Power was shared
until 1948 when the National Party won the general election. The
Afrikaners immediately established the policy known as apartheid, which
means apartness in Afrikaans. Every population group considered non-European
by the government was governed separately and subordinated at every level
to white South Africa. This meant that there was separation between
all African communities including the whites and non-whites; Africans and
other non-whites; all African ethnic groups; and rural Africans and urban
Africans. Most of these people were restricted to rural reservations
called homelands where life was very difficult. The few who worked
outside the reservations were usually young single men. They received
low wages and lived in segregated rural settlements tightly controlled
by whites.
Eventually the oppressed grew restless and strikes, boycotts and demonstrations
became prominent. The African National Congress (ANC) was one of
the groups protesting apartheid. Their goal was to establish a nonracial
alliance, end apartheid and create a nonracial democracy. However,
this task was even more difficult because there was not much unity among
the non-European communities because these groups had been kept apart for
so long and were not communicating. There was also not much support
from the black-community actions groups in the urban and rural areas.
Because of these factors, in the early 1960’s, the apartheid regime held
off its opposition.
However, within a decade, the resistance movement returned. Steven
Biko led the South African Students Organisation (SASO) to form the Black
People’s Convention in 1972. This group helped to launch the Black
Consciousness movement. Then in 1976, a revolt by students in Soweto
against an offensive educational system spread like wildfire throughout
the country. The arrest and killing of Biko in police custody also
served as fuel and created a fresh outburst of public anger. In 1977,
organizations associated with the Black Consciousness Movement were banned
and many of the people involved were put into jail or forced into exile.
The 1980’s were very difficult in South Africa. An international
campaign was started to prevent non-South African companies from investing
in the country including an attempt to ban any exports from South Africa.
The way of life was affected greatly by this damaged economy. Strikes,
work stoppages, boycotts, civil disobediences and acts of sabotage all
lead to the collapse of the African reservations. Hundreds of thousands
of impoverished people ignored the laws and flooded into the cities in
search of work, food and shelter.
Nelson Mandela, who was involved with the ANC since the Second World
War, had been sentenced for life in prison for sabotage. After 27
years as a political prisoner, he was released by President F.W. de Klerk.
In the early 1990’s, Mandela led the multi-party negotiations that finally
brought and end to apartheid. He also became the first democratically
elected president of South Africa
Post Apartheid
In 1990, President de Klerk finally announced the
end of the apartheid and by 1991, all apartheid laws were repealed.
In response to the end of this era, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission
(TRC) was established. Its purpose is to investigate acts of violence
and discrimination committed by the apartheid regime. The TRC’s motto
is "Truth: The road to reconciliation." Although the intent of this
commission is noble, there is some controversy over this effort to come
to terms with South Africa’s past. Is it possible to reach justice?
Is it worth reopening old wounds? Can the truth truly be established
when everyone has a different perception of the events that took place?
Apartheid and Post-Apartheid Literature
During the final years of the apartheid era and
subsequent transition to democracy, South African literature became prominent
throughout the world. Writers responded to the ever-present political
turmoil and its daily effects on the people of that country. They
chronicled or satirized state-enforced racism and explored the possibilities
of resistance. Now that apartheid is over, writers are questioning the
conception of reconciliation and rebuilding. Literature that embraces
these issues has helped to shape definitions of ethnic identity and national
unity. Apartheid and Post-Apartheid literature have become political
narratives initiating a closer look at the juxtaposition of writing and
ethics.
Selected
Authors working on Apartheid-Related Themes
-
Breyten Breytenbach
-
Andre Brink
-
J. M. Coetzee
-
Athol Fugard
-
Nadine Gordimer
-
Alex La Guma
-
Bessie Head
-
Farida Karodia
-
Ryan Malan
-
Alan Paton
-
Olive Schreiner
Summaries and Themes
Authors express their thoughts about the apartheid
in different ways through various forms of literature. Sometimes
the word "apartheid" is never even used in a piece of writing but it is
still a prominent issue. Listed below are summaries of well-known
books that discuss the topic of apartheid, which are divided by theme.
Prisoners, Exiles, Refugees
The True Confessions of an Albino Terrorist (1983)
Breytenbach relates the seven years spent in a South African prison
on charges of terrorist acts against the state (www.unhcr-50.org).
In Memory of Snow and Dust (1989)
Breytenbach pieces together the lives of three exiles living in Paris
(www.unhcr-50.org).
When the Rain Clouds Gather (1968)
The poverty-stricken village of Golema Mmidi, in the heart of rural
Botswana, offers a haven to the exiles gathered there. Makhaya, a
political refugee from South Africa, becomes involved with an English agricultural
expert and the villagers as they struggle to upgrade their traditional
farming methods with modern techniques. The pressures of tradition,
the opposition of the local chief, and, above all, the harsh climate threaten
to bring tragedy to the community, but strangely, there remains a hope
for the future (web.uflib.ufl.edu/cm/africana/head.htm).
Conflict between Races
In the Fog of the Season's End (1972)
In his most autobiographical novel, La Guma describes the South African
struggles through characters who are involved in political resistance,
unlike the lonely victims of his earlier works. Although the main
character, Beukes, has reached the conclusion that collective action is
essential to solving the problems of South Africa's system, the author
uses flashbacks to reveal the squalor and despair, which are the source
of the political movement. The characters overcome the isolation
and disconnectedness which plague the subjects in his earlier works in
order to work together towards their goal (web.uflib.ufl.edu/cm/africana/laguma.htm).
Cry, The Beloved Country (1948)
Paton began writing this, his first and his best-known novel, in 1946
in Trondheim, Norway, and finished the book in San Francisco on Christmas
Eve, the same year. It depicted the collective guilt and friendship
over racial prejudices in the story of a black South African. Stephen
Kumalo, an aging Zulu minister, travels from his tribal village to Johannesburg,
where he finds that his only son, Absalom, has murdered the only son of
a white man, James Jarvis. The tragedy connects these two men, and
later they begin to work together (www.kirjasto.sci.fi).
Women
Other Secrets (2000)
A sensitively written novel that explores the complex relationships
between mother and daughter and the peripheral role of a principled, hard-working
father whose only fault is his futile optimism. Sisters Yasmin and
Meena and their family are among those helpless to control their destinies
in the arid years of apartheid, but not entirely without hope. Yasmin's
strivings bring her some of what she wants in life, but not without tragedy
(www.suntimes.co.za).
The Story of an African Farm (1883)
The novel's heroine, the fiercely independent Lyndall, is often regarded
as the first example of that much-feared and much-jeered literary phenomenon
-- the "New Woman". It strikes, very forcefully indeed, the first
deathblow at the institution of marriage. Lyndall's frustration at
the limited opportunities available to women, her bitterness at blatant
gender discrimination, her refusal to commit herself to the iron contract
of marriage, all find echoes in most of the other "New Women" of the 1880s
and the 1890s -- not least in Hardy's Sue Bridehead. Lyndall's disillusionment
begins quite early. Driven by an insatiable hunger for knowledge,
Lyndall leaves her stagnant farm life and enters a boarding school through
her own sheer determination. But her experience at the boarding school,
instead of opening up wider vistas of knowledge before her, only reveals
how hopelessly confined is a woman's lot (www.yale.edu).
White Perspective (Life paralleling apartheid)
The Conservationist (1974)
The Conservationist, which won the Booker Prize for 1974, evokes the
sterility of the white community. Mehring, the Afrikaner antihero
whose farm is as barren as his life, conserves both nature and the apartheid
system, the one to keep the other at bay. He likes to preserve nature's
variety but is in fact its exploiter; nor does nature return his sentimental
love. In his moral vacuum, Mehring sees Africa returning to the possession
of the blacks. Mehring is not a male chauvinist Boer; he is tolerant
but no liberal, a financier using his farm as a tax-deductible expense.
His leftist mistress travels round the world on his money. He likes
to be seen as a country gentleman, but sexually he is a colonialist as
we see when he picks up a coloured girl and takes her to an old mine property,
only to be surprised by the mine guards. The corpse of an unknown
African is found on the farm, silently disputing Mehring's claim to his
own clean soil. He identifies with the nameless black man under the
reeds, burying him in a coffin. Yet, the corpse haunting Mehring
and his house (a symbol of South Africa) is the claim on Africa by those
who possess no land at all (www.nobel.se).
Disgrace (1999)
David Lurie is hardly the hero of his own life, or anyone else's.
At 52, the protagonist of Disgrace is at the end of his professional and
romantic game, and seems to be deliberately courting disaster. Long
a professor of modern languages at Cape Town University College, he has
recently been relegated to adjunct professor of communications at the same
institution, now pointedly renamed Cape Technical University: Twice married
and twice divorced, his magnetic looks on the wane, David rather cruelly
seduces one of his students, and his conduct unbecoming is soon uncovered.
Refusing to play the public-repentance game, David gets himself fired--a
final gesture of contempt. Now, he thinks, he will write something
on Byron's last years. Not empty, unread criticism, "prose measured
by the yard," but a libretto. To do so, he heads for the Eastern
Cape and his daughter's farm. In her mid-20s, Lucy has turned her
back on city sophistications: with five hectares, she makes her living
by growing flowers and produce and boarding dogs. Just as David has
settled into his temporary role as farm worker and unenthusiastic animal-shelter
volunteer, he and Lucy are attacked by three black men. Unable to
protect his daughter, David's disgrace is complete. Hers, however,
is far worse (www.amazon.com).
Romance
The Rights of Desire (2000)
Ruben Olivier: He's 65, a widower with mild memories, a former librarian
and inveterate reader. Olivier lives in post-apartheid South Africa,
amidst the bitter recriminations and confused violence outside the very
doorstep of his Cape Town manse. Olivier's life, both public and
private, is a study in shelter. Olivier's sons, worried for their
father's safety after the random murder of his best pal and chess-opponent,
are committed to spiriting him out of South Africa, but Olivier won't submit.
After all, he argues, he has Magrieta, his petulant black housekeeper,
to look after him, and also Antje of Bengal, the ghost of a 17th century
slave executed for the poisoning of her master and lover's wife.
To appease his children, nonetheless, Olivier agrees to take in a lodger.
Enter Tessa Butler: 29, caustic and carnal. From their first conversation
Olivier is in love: madly, deeply, as if all the illusions and allusions
in his books had shuddered to life in one blinding instant (www.salon.com).
Murder
My Traitor's Heart (1990)
The first part of the book is the personal confession of a liberal
young Afrikaner and the second, which takes up well over half the book,
has the ironic title, 'Tales of Ordinary Murder'. The third part,
'A Root in Arid Ground', tells the story of Neil Alcock and his wife Creina
and of their experimental settlement at Mdukatshani across the Tugela from
Msinga, the most violent rural area in the whole country. So Malan
has in fact written three books in one but he has fused the three together
with a passionate and compelling logic to produce what may well come to
be seen as the most starkly illuminating book to have been written about
South Africa in recent times (www.uni-ulm.de/~rturrell/classics/malanclassic.html).
Plays
My Children! My Africa! (1989)
Apartheid was ending and Fugard attacks the decision of the ANC to
boycott schools and the damage it would cause a generation of Africans.
Fugard has moved from the injustices of the South African government to
the mistakes of the ANC (www.iainfisher.com).
Works Cited
"About South Africa." (1998): n. pag. Online. SA-Events. Internet. 25
Sept. 2001. Available: http://www.saevents.co.za/about.htm
"Alan (Stewart) Patton (1903-1988)." (2000): n. pag. Online. Internet.
3 Nov. 2001. Available: http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/apaton.htm
"Alex La Guma." (6 Nov. 2000): n. pag. Online. Africana Collection,
George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida. Internet. 3 Nov. 2001.
Available: http://web.uflib.ufl.edu/cm/africana/laguma.htm
"Bessie Head." (27 Dec. 1999): n. pag. Online. Africana Collection,
George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida. Internet. 3 Nov. 2001.
Available: http://web.uflib.ufl.edu/cm/africana/head.htm
"Books; Other Secrets." (5 Nov. 2000): n. pag. Online. Sunday Times.
Internet. 3 Nov. 2001. Available: http://www.suntimes.co.za/2000/11/05/scamto/scamto08.htm
Dutta, Shanta. "Sue’s Obscure Sisters’." (May 1996): n. pag. Online.
The Thomas Hardy Journal, Vol. XII. Internet. 3 Nov. 2001. Available: http://www.yale.edu/hardysoc/VPBOX/shanta.htm
Fagiolo, Nicoletta. “Breyten Breytenbach.” (2000): n. pag. Online. Internet.
3 Nov. 2001. Available: http://www.unhcr-50.org/gallery/breytenb.html
Fisher, Iain. "Athol Fugard: Statements." n. pag. Online. Internet.
19 Nov. 2001. Available: http://www.xs4all.nl/~fisher/fugard.html
Fried, Kerry. "Disgrace by J.M. Coetzee; Editorial Reviews." n. pag.
Online. Amazon.com. Internet. 3 Nov. 2001. Available: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0140296409/qid=1005443285/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_3_1/002-1536129-1532066
Hallett, Robin. "My Traitor’s Heart." (June/ July 1990): n. pag. Online.
Southern African Review of Books, Issue 15. Internet. 19 Nov. 2001. Available:
http://www.uni-ulm.de/~rturrell/classics/malanclassic.html
Mbeki, Thabo. "Acts of terror must be condemned unreservedly" (Sept.
2001): n. pag. Online. ANC Today: Online voice of the African National
Congress:Vol.1, no. 34. Internet. 19 Sept. 2001. Available: http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/anctoday/2001/at34.htm
Miles, Jonathan. "The Rights of Desire by Andre Brink." (19 April 2001):
n. pag. Online. Salon.com. Internet. 3 Nov. 2001. Available: http://www.salon.com/books/review/2001/04/19/brink/
"South Africa." (2001): n. pag. Online. The World Fact Book. Internet.
19 Sept. 2001. Available: http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/sf.html
“South Africa: Can a country overcome its history?” (1998): n. pag.
Online. Annenberg/ CPB Exhibits. Internet. 18 Sept. 2001. Available: http://www.learner.org/exhibits/southafrica/
Wastberg, Per. "Nadine Gordimer and the South African Experience." (26
April 2001): n. pag. Online. The Nobel Foundation. Internet. 3 Nov. 2001.
Available: http://www.nobel.se/literature/articles/wastberg/
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