Cape Times

GOOGLE CELEBRATES MIRIAM TLALI LEGACY

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GOOGLE yesterday celebrated the legacy of author and activist Miriam Tlali, South Africa’s first black woman to publish a novel in 1975. Tlali died last year in Joburg. She would have turned 85 yesterday. Her work touched the nerve of the apartheid regime and was frequently banned. Tlali was one of the first people to write about the 1976 Soweto students’ uprising in her second novel, Amandla.

Her first novel, Muriel the Metropolit­an, was published in 1975. An online search shows that the novel was written in 1969 and not published for at least six years due to many publishing houses in South Africa rejecting it. In 1975, Ravan Press published it only after removing certain extracts they thought would offend the Censorship Board. However, Muriel

the Metropolit­an was banned almost immediatel­y after it was published, as the board considered it undesirabl­e for the South African political environmen­t at the time. Amandla is her other acclaimed work, described by UCT English Professor Barbara Boswell as one of South Africa’s most detailed accounts of the 1976 Soweto uprising from the perspectiv­e of a number of young revolution­aries of the time. “Based on events Tlali witnessed as a resident of Soweto during 1976, the novel offers a detailed portrayal of black consciousn­ess ideology in the service of anti-apartheid activism, while explicatin­g gender relations between men and women activists and members of the larger community,” Boswell wrote. Tlali also published a collection of short stories,

Mihloti. In 2009 a book club named Miriam Tlali Reading & Book Club was formed in her honour. The club has hosted literary giants, including poet laureate Keorapetse Kgositsile, Nadine Gordimer, Gomolemo Mokae and Pitika Ntuli.

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