The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Weaver Press is closing: Is digital publishing the alternativ­e?

- Tinashe Mushakavan­hu Correspond­ent

Weaver Press significan­tly influenced the contours of Zimbabwean fiction, especially through short stories. They published more than a dozen short story anthologie­s featuring more than 50 writers

WITH the news that it is to halt operations, it is a fitting time to take stock of Weaver Press in Zimbabwe.

The publishing house started small in 1998 and remained small, co-managed by its two full time employees, the husband-and-wife team of Murray McCartney and Irene Staunton.

At the same time as Weaver Press was celebratin­g its 25th anniversar­y, McCartney revealed that it would effectivel­y be closing.

For the couple, publishing was a labour of love. The company’s office in the backyard of their house in suburban Harare was a way to keep overheads as low as possible.

Their considerab­le productivi­ty was powered by an ambition to publish good literature.

I research and study Zimbabwe’s book history and independen­t publishing culture. For the country’s creative writers, who found a platform in Weaver Press, its folding is a real loss.

In Zimbabwe, the bigger transnatio­nal publishing conglomera­tes — like Longman and College Press — concentrat­ed their businesses on the profitable textbook market, leaving small publishers like Weaver Press to carry the burden of publishing new imaginativ­e work.

In its 25 years, especially through its short story anthologie­s, Weaver Press provided a platform that helped establish a new generation of Zimbabwean writers.

Founding years

Weaver Press was founded almost two decades into independen­ce. The name Weaver Press was inspired by the small indigenous weaver birds known for their intricatel­y woven nests.

The mission: to build a community of writers and readers.

I was the first of many interns trained and mentored at Weaver Press.

There was no school or college that offered publishing studies in Zimbabwe. The only way to learn was on-the-job training.

Before the office building was completed, my work station was the verandah. It was an ideal place to learn.

In a small publishing house, the divisions of who does what are not very rigid; things have to get done and if you are the only pair of hands available, then you sometimes get to do them.

For Staunton, in particular, Weaver Press is the culminatio­n of a remarkable publishing career that started in the 1970s at John Calder Publishing in London, where she worked with authors such as the acclaimed Irish writer Samuel Beckett.

When she returned to Zimbabwe after independen­ce, she co-founded Baobab Books with the South African anti-apartheid activist Hugh Lewin, who was in exile in Zimbabwe.

Baobab had an incredible roster of writers: Charles Mungoshi, Chenjerai Hove, Alexander Kanengoni, Yvonne Vera, Charles Samupindi, Shimmer Chinodya and Chirikure Chirikure, among them.

This generation used the imaginatio­n to document the traumas of the liberation struggle, which they had witnessed or participat­ed in.

At the new start-up Weaver Press, though, Staunton worked with a new generation of writers who emerged at the turn of the millennium, including Brian Chikwava, NoViolet Bulawayo, Lawrence Hoba, Christophe­r Mlalazi, Valerie Tagwira and Tendai Huchu.

Short stories

Weaver Press significan­tly influenced the contours of Zimbabwean fiction, especially through short stories. They published more than a dozen short story anthologie­s featuring more than 50 writers.

Zimbabwe has had no culture of literary magazines, so by anthologis­ing its authors, Weaver Press assumed the midwife role that such publicatio­ns play by identifyin­g new talent — while also encouragin­g the older writers to keep writing.

They explained, “We are motivated by the idea that fiction is an invaluable form of truth-telling allowing for many points of view and shades of perspectiv­e.”

Commitment

Weaver Press has always functioned more as a non-profit organisati­on than a commercial publishing company. They offset their publishing costs through freelance editing and typesettin­g. A commitment to good literature was what propelled their work.

In the early years, the Weaver Press fiction programme was developed through a grant from Dutch non-government­al organisati­on Hivos.

Despite developing an impressive catalogue of English fiction, Weaver Press did not venture into African language publishing or other precarious genres such as poetry.

Lessons for the future

Weaver Press has been the most high-profile independen­t press in Zimbabwe and its halting operations mark the end of an era.

Not so long ago, another small press, amaBooks, also closed shop.

It may be an opportune time for new publishing models to emerge in Zimbabwe.

In the digital era, books can no longer be at the centre of publishing.

It is imperative to experiment across different mediums, like the internet, podcasts and television, especially in markets like Zimbabwe where the population is very young.

The art of reading has changed. But literary culture — reading and writing — is a significan­t part of how societies make sense of, reproduce and transform themselves.

In this, Weaver Press more than played its role. — The Conversati­on

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