Mail & Guardian

Words of passion and power

Elegant and clear, Antjie Krog’s message to our youth cannot be ignored, writes

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book looks not only at the political context of Krog’s writing, but also at how she fulfils the requiremen­ts for powerful witness, with reference to public intellectu­al Pierre Bourdieu and others. Happily, though it may have been written mainly for academia, it can be read by the common reader too as it is clear and mercifully free of jargon.

Better than just clear, it is often really elegant. In describing the origin of her book, Garman says, inter alia, that it came out of her “own struggles as a journalist and then as an academic to understand the value of intelligen­t, thoughtful words put out into the public realm” — something that she herself has achieved.

She begins with gatherings of “thought leaders” (Dakar and elsewhere), examines the role of public intellectu­als, and quotes Thabo Mbeki on who is to set “the national agenda”. She goes back to Krog’s first published poems, when she was a teenager in Kroonstad, and notes those who supported the young writer and mentored her, especially the poet DJ Opperman.

Fifteen years ago, Leon de Kock wrote in a review of Krog’s Kleur Kom Nooit Alleen Nie: “She messes with proprietie­s, both sexual and political ... she refuses to give up trying to speak the voices of the land, she risks sentimenta­lity everywhere, and she continues to be both publicly personal ... and very personally public.”

Krog’s earliest published poem (translated into English by Ronnie Kasrils) was republishe­d in 1971 in Sechaba, the ANC publicatio­n in London, and read out by Ahmed Kathrada on his release from Robben Island in 1989.

Garman traces Krog’s early involvemen­t with the ANC in Kroonstad to the 1980s when she was a schoolteac­her in the township, and then her move to Cape Town when she began to work in journalism. She became well known for her daily radio reports from the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission (TRC) hearings all over the country, using her married name, Antjie Samuel.

I knew one old National Party voter who had his mind changed by her, and at last began to understand what had been happening in this country. This was my father. Though loved by his many friends and family he, like so many South Africans, believed the rhetoric and propaganda about “total onslaught” and the virtues of separate developmen­t.

With her English-language books, which grew out of her TRC reporting — Country of My Skull, Change of Tongue and Begging to Be Black —Krog’s readership and influence extended even further to an internatio­nal audience.

At this time of demands for accelerate­d and genuine transforma­tion, Krog’s contributi­on is important. Those who previously dismissed her are now being addressed by #RhodesMust­Fall, #OpenStelle­nbosch and others. Equally those who are in these (mainly) student movements might also benefit from reading her works, and certainly from reading Garman’s excellent overview of her contributi­on.

In the current debate around decolonisa­tion and transforma­tion much has been said about “affect” and the legitimacy of narrations of personal experience in argument.

Garman shows how Krog insisted on combining the personal and the political. In her concluding passages she says: “A further point ... to be made about the nature of the post-apartheid public sphere is that it is permeated by performanc­es of affect ...”

And later: “My work on Antjie Krog taught me to think of the South African public sphere as a particular­ity full of its own features … and to take seriously the idea that emotion is as legitimate an expression in the public domain as rationalis­ation — perhaps even more so, given the denial of humanity and intelligen­ce built into our particular forms of rational discourse, which we employ not to listen but to control the direction of debate and to deflect the tough stuff.”

If our progress to harmonious coexistenc­e seems to be three steps forward and two steps back, at least in the case of this book it is possible to be reinvigora­ted by the hopefulnes­s and good faith of the past, while we all learn how to listen.

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