Fools, Bells and the Habit of Eating
Title | Fools, Bells and the Habit of Eating PDF eBook |
Author | Zakes Mda |
Publisher | Wits University Press |
Pages | 184 |
Release | 2002-01-01 |
Genre | Drama |
ISBN | 1868143775 |
Cupidity, corruption and conciliation are the themes of the three plays in this collection from one of South Africa’s leading writes. The Mother of all Eating, a one-hander, with its central character a corrupt Lesotho official, is a grinding satire on materialism in which the protagonist gets his come-uppance. You Fool, How Can the Sky Fall? is an unbridled study in grotesquerie, reflecting a belief, traceable throughout Mda’s work, that government by those who inherit a revolution is almost inevitably, in the first decade or two, hijacked by the smart operators. The Bells of Amersfoort, with its graphic portrayal of the isolation imposed by exile, picks up on the themes of the other two plays but adds to them the concept of ‘healing’, both of the soul and of the land, in a lyrical work which holds out more hope than do its companions in this volume. The plays are introduced by Rob Amato, who directed much of Mda’s earlier work.
Fools, Bells, and the Habit of Eating
Title | Fools, Bells, and the Habit of Eating PDF eBook |
Author | Zakes Mda |
Publisher | |
Pages | 161 |
Release | 2002 |
Genre | Africa, Southern |
ISBN |
The Methuen Drama Guide to Contemporary South African Theatre
Title | The Methuen Drama Guide to Contemporary South African Theatre PDF eBook |
Author | Martin Middeke |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Pages | 393 |
Release | 2015-11-19 |
Genre | Performing Arts |
ISBN | 1408176718 |
South Africa has a uniquely rich and diverse theatre tradition which has responded energetically to the country's remarkable transition, helping to define the challenges and contradictions of this young democracy. This volume considers the variety of theatre forms, and the work of the major playwrights and theatre makers producing work in democratic South Africa. It offers an overview of theatre pioneers and theatre forms in Part One, before concentrating on the work of individual playwrights in Part Two. Through its wide-ranging survey of indigenous drama written predominantly in the English language and the analysis of more than 100 plays, a detailed account is provided of post-apartheid South African theatre and its engagement with the country's recent history. Part One offers six overview chapters on South African theatre pioneers and theatre forms. These include consideration of the work of artists such as Barney Simon, Mbongeni Ngema, Phyllis Klotz; the collaborations of William Kentridge and the Handspring Puppet Company; the work of Magnet Theatre, and of physical and popular community theatre forms. Part Two features chapters on twelve major playwrights, including Athol Fugard, Reza de Wet, Lara Foot, Zakes Mda, Yaël Farber, Mpumelelo Paul Grootboom, Mike van Graan and Brett Bailey. It includes a survey of emerging playwrights and significant plays, and the book closes with an interview with Aubrey Sekhabi, the Artistic Director of the South African State Theatre in Pretoria. Written by a team of over twenty leading international scholars, The Methuen Drama Guide to Contemporary South African Theatre is a unique resource that will be invaluable to students and scholars from a range of different disciplines, as well as theatre practitioners.
Exit
Title | Exit PDF eBook |
Author | Stefan Helgesson |
Publisher | Rodopi |
Pages | 317 |
Release | 2011 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9042032529 |
Preliminary Material -- Some Thoughts on the Idea of Exit: in Recent African Narratives of Childhood /Richard K. Priebe -- Generation and Complicity: in Zoë Wicomb's Playing in the Light /Maria Olaussen -- “Let Me Tell You About Bekolo's Latest Film, Les Saignantes, But First . . . ” /Kenneth W. Harrow -- Tradition and Creativity: in Zakes Mda's Cion /David Bell -- Paton's Discovery, Soyinka's Invention /Bernth Lindfors -- Writing Out Imperialism?: A Note on Nationalism and Political Identity in the African-Owned Newspapers of Colonial Ghana /Stephanie Newell -- After Exit: Exile, Creativity, and the Risk of Translation /Stefan Helgesson -- African Presences and Representations: in the Principality/Markgrafschaft of Bayreuth /Eckhard Breitinger -- Taking Flight: and the Libertarian Crow-Scarer /Gerald Porter -- “In my end is my beginning”: The Death of Virginia Woolf /Catherine Sandbach-Dahlström -- Following the Race Track?: Swedish, Chinese, Scottish, Irish, Canadian in Diamond Grill by Fred Wah /Elisabeth Mårald -- Literature and Scripture: An Impossible Filiation /J. Hillis Miller -- “Gazing into the future”: Beginnings, Endings, and Midpoints in Paul Muldoon's Why Brownlee Left /Lars-Håkan Svensson -- Exiting the Environmental Trap: Knowledge Regimes and the Third Phase of Environmental Policy /Sverker Sörlin -- The End of the “Earth” /Willy Bach -- Myself as a Puff of Dust: A Ghost Story /Jane Bryce -- TIXE YLNO: or Redefining Identities /Janice Kulyk Keefer -- Contributors.
Dictionary of African Biography
Title | Dictionary of African Biography PDF eBook |
Author | Emmanuel Kwaku Akyeampong |
Publisher | |
Pages | 3382 |
Release | 2012-02-02 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 0195382072 |
From the Pharaohs to Fanon, Dictionary of African Biography provides a comprehensive overview of the lives of the men and women who shaped Africa's history. Unprecedented in scale, DAB covers the whole continent from Tunisia to South Africa, from Sierra Leone to Somalia. It also encompasses the full scope of history from Queen Hatsheput of Egypt (1490-1468 BC) and Hannibal, the military commander and strategist of Carthage (243-183 BC), to Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana (1909-1972), Miriam Makeba and Nelson Mandela of South Africa (1918 -).
Animals and Desire in South African Fiction
Title | Animals and Desire in South African Fiction PDF eBook |
Author | Jason D. Price |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 286 |
Release | 2017-07-15 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 3319567268 |
This book considers the political potential of affective experiences of desire as reflected in contemporary South African literature. Jason Price argues that definitions of desire deployed by capitalist and colonial culture maintain social inequality by managing relations to ensure a steady flow of capital and pleasure for the dominant classes, whereas affective encounters with animals reveal the nonhuman nature of desire, a biopower that, in its unpredictability, can frustrate regimes of management and control. Price wonders how animals’ different desires might enable new modes of thought to positively transform and resist the status quo. This book contends that South African literary works employ nonhuman desire and certain indigenous notions of desire to imagine a South Africa that can be markedly different from the past.
Sometimes There Is a Void
Title | Sometimes There Is a Void PDF eBook |
Author | Zakes Mda |
Publisher | Macmillan + ORM |
Pages | 692 |
Release | 2012-01-03 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 1429949937 |
A New York Times Notable Book of the Year South African novelist and playwright Zakes Mda's remarkable life story of growing up in South Africa, Lesotho, and America, told with style and gusto. Zakes Mda is the most acclaimed South African writer of the independence era. His novels tell stories that venture far beyond the conventional narratives of a people's struggle against apartheid. In this memoir, he tells the story of a life that intersects with the political life of his country but that at its heart is the classic adventure story of an artist, lover, father, teacher, and bon vivant. Zanemvula Mda was born in 1948 into a family of lawyers and grew up in Soweto's ambitious educated black class. At age fifteen he crossed the Telle River from South Africa into Basutoland (Lesotho), exiled like his father, a "founding spirit" of the Pan Africanist Congress. Exile was hard, but it was just another chapter in Mda's coming-of-age. He served as an altar boy (and was preyed on by priests), flirted with shebeen girls, feared the racist Boers, read comic books alongside the literature of the PAC, fell for the music of Dvorák and Coltrane, wrote his first stories—and felt the void at the heart of things that makes him an outsider wherever he goes. The Soweto uprisings called him to politics; playwriting brought him back to South Africa, where he became writer in residence at the famed Market Theatre; three marriages led him hither and yon; acclaim brought him to America, where he began writing the novels that are so thick with the life of his country. In all this, Mda struggled to remain his own man, and with Sometimes There Is a Void he shows that independence opened the way for the stories of individual South Africans in all their variety.