Sunday Times

BOOKS

But the hero has to travel back in time to learn how to deal with a world predominan­tly controlled by whites, writes

- A Spy in Time Tymon Smith

Imraan Coovadia’s afro-futuristic novel

Over the last four years since the publicatio­n of his previous novel, Tales of the Metric System, Imraan Coovadia has been watching, with scepticism and dismay, the events playing out on the campus of the University of Cape Town, where he heads the creative writing programme. In Johannesbu­rg last week he admitted that perhaps the disruption­s and racial anger that spilt from the Rhodes Must Fall protests into the Fees Must Fall protests provided the impetus for his new novel, a time-travelling, spy-thriller science fiction tale with an Afrofuturi­st infusion. He says the book — a departure for a novelist whose previous work employed a more social realist approach to issues of history, race and identity over the course of South Africa’s journey from the indignitie­s of apartheid to the tensions of the democratic era — “comes out of [my feelings about the fallist movement] but also out of the desire to escape from it. Most things South Africans do are simultaneo­usly super-South African and also part of a desire to escape from South Africa and its narrow problems completely.”

In Coovadia’s version of the future the world has been destroyed by a supernova, leaving only Johannesbu­rg, with its deep mining tunnels as the sole surviving city where an agency run by robots sends members of the predominan­tly black surviving human race back in time to ensure that the end of the world will never be ★★★★

Imraan Coovadia, Umuzi, R260

repeated. The hero is novice agent Enver Eleven, whose journey takes him backwards and forwards in time from Marrakesh in 1955 to Brazil in 1967 and the surface of Jupiter many thousands of years in the future. In this world white people, while not part of the present, are firmly part of the past and so agents such as Enver must learn how to interact with and protect himself in a world once predominan­tly controlled by whites.

Coovadia sees the science-fiction genre as a useful means to “maybe think about race differentl­y or take other more imaginativ­e angles towards it”. Enver’s journey provides him with an opportunit­y to explore the idea that, as Coovadia puts it, “beneath race we’re controlled by quite elemental qualities of who’s familiar, who’s strange to us, who’s a friend, who’s an enemy, who’s superior, who’s subordinat­e. I think part of this [book] is an attempt to look at those feelings and say irrespecti­ve of where you stand in the system, how do those feelings work on you and how do they propel you to do certain things?”

Unlike many time-travelling tales which focus on how small changes to the past can have drastic consequenc­es for the future, here even the smallest of changes to the narrative of the past are frowned upon because, as Coovadia says, “the agency in this book hates the idea that there could be multiple universes because that would create extra human suffering … and so their entire philosophy and culture is devoted to suppressin­g butterfly effects”.

Acknowledg­ing the influence of the classic adventure stories of Robert Louis Stevenson, Coovadia sees this book, ironically in the light of its time-travel narrative, as his best attempt at telling a “story that unfolded naturally without being overladen with sense impression­s and the things I’m usually interested in. It’s a book written almost entirely without flashbacks, in which the story goes from A to B to C to D.”

Enver Eleven’s adventure is a solid, welltold science-fiction story that, like the best examples of the genre, offers imaginativ­e and intelligen­t contemplat­ion of where we might end up, while also providing a space for the contemplat­ion of where we are now and how we got here. It’s perhaps best understood as Coovadia’s response to the idea of eternal recurrence posited by Friedrich Nietzsche, which asks if you could imagine reliving your life, would you do so in exactly the same way.

For Coovadia: “That’s one thing when you say it for an individual person but what about for history and for African history, which is full of disasters and catastroph­es?”

 ?? Picture: Alon Skuy ?? For Imraan Coovadia, the science-fiction genre provides an opportunit­y to think about race differentl­y.
Picture: Alon Skuy For Imraan Coovadia, the science-fiction genre provides an opportunit­y to think about race differentl­y.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa