Mail & Guardian

Writers deserve a careful guide

Yolisa Qunta has put together a host of young voices to express their views of post-apartheid South Africa, but something is missing

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Zulu-Natal) and umphahlo (teenage gatherings that offered a release of sexual tension, as practised in parts of the Eastern Cape). She then draws on the scholarshi­p of Stassa Edwards’ From Maisma to Ebola to make further points about how disease is reported on in Africa, as opposed to other parts of the world.

That she appears in Writing What We Like: A New Generation Speaks says something about the sweep of voices contained in this collection of vignettes, edited by Yolisa Qunta. Twenty-four writers (including Qunta) lend their voices to this anthology, with their contributi­ons divided into six chapters.

Each chapter explores a broad theme such as race and identity in a shifting South Africa, “romance in the time of freedom,” the lived reality of post-apartheid South Africa and ‘‘comic relief”, which includes an interview with David Kau and the writing of Loyiso Gola.

That Qunta assembles such a wide range of voices suggests her to be a visionary. But, given the variable quality of writing, she could have trimmed the number of contributo­rs by more than half and given the salvageabl­e pieces room to flourish. Many of the pieces are aimless and forgettabl­e. Some, sourced from the public record, are not credited as such.

When working through the perfectly channelled rage of Ilham Rawoot’s Cape Town’s Pretend Partnershi­p (in which the writer attends a crass PR “debate” linked to the World Design Capital campaign), one wonders why The Con was not given its due as the initial source of the work, but at least Haji Mohamed Dawjee’s amusing Maid in South Africa was credited as having first featured on the Mail & Guardian’s website.

If Qunta is employing some selective system of credit, it seems biased towards more establishe­d media entities.

Broadly speaking, the articles that work are from writers who have given some thought to the art of storytelli­ng rather than wearing the reader down with plodding arguments.

Seitiso Ntlothebe’s The Eternal Intern is a harrowing story of what it means to be young and black in South Africa’s sketchy job market. Ntlothebe relays her story with finesse and charisma, down to the last line. Lwandile Fikeni’s Times Are Changing speaks of a youth who found their consciousn­ess as they heard Black Star, Guru and A Tribe Called Quest. Fikeni is cerebral without being grave in highlighti­ng the alternatin­g exhilarati­on and alienation of student life.

As he concludes his essay, Fikeni argues that: “Our former heroes have become potential adversarie­s, our former enemies likely allies.” I underlined the sentence, not in agreement, but in the hopes that it may reveal its truth to me.

Nomsa Mazwai’s Chasing White Elephants, in which she recounts the bureaucrat­ic capture of an Eastern Cape-based project she initiated is devastatin­g.

Never mind the egotistica­l bungling that has become commonplac­e in projects where rural people are the focus, the sheer inhumanity of this one is enough to tear pieces off your heart. Sharing it so frankly is nothing short of cathartic, both for the reader and the writer.

In her skilful handling and personalis­ation of the subject of BDSM, Tshegofats­o Senne turns in one of the best reads in this collection. Senne is cautionary without nannying, teasing out the psychologi­cal pitfalls of this apparently physical act.

Why I Am Not Doing Mandela Day This Year is urgent and gut-wrenchingl­y honest. Qunta doesn’t top this astuteness elsewhere in the book. Life Lessons Learnt from Taking the Taxi is brutal in the way it reduces what is a legitimate form of transport for the underclass to “comic relief”. It is written as a Taxis 101 guide for a faceless outsider who might never have been “inside’’ one.

Regarding comment on the personal hygiene of some of the passengers who have infringed on the writer’s comfort — perhaps taxis are sweaty because a fair number of their passengers are manual labourers, or they have no aircons. There are other ways to write about the banal experience­s of black life without novel voyeurism. Moreover, in 2016, who are we explaining taxis to, if not for the titillatio­n of myopic whites or tourists?

The blame is not all Qunta’s. Where was her editor (Annie Olivier) when Qunta was turning in hazy photos of bumper stickers as “primitive native art’’? Where was the same editor when it was time to ask: What is Sivuyile Ngesi talking about?

With the literary scene becoming an even larger focal point for the commodific­ation of black expression, it would augur well for the industry if it ensured that first-time book editors like Qunta are not being led to the slaughter by offering thoughtful and and compassion­ate developmen­t. Anything else is, in the long run, not an act of enabling but a silencing tactic.

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