Mail & Guardian

It’s lit at the M&G’s book fest

Topics include writing since Sol Plaatje to reporting on Marikana – and will continue at the afterparty

- Darryl Accone

How much has storytelli­ng in South Africa changed over the past 100 years? The seventh annual M&G Literary Festival, affectiona­tely known as Litfest, will explore that question in sessions ranging from fiction, nonfiction, editing and publishing to reporting and academic theorising.

The two-day event at Sci-Bono in Newtown, Johannesbu­rg, on October 8 and 9, will pay homage to novelist, poet, translator and political activist Sol T Plaatje, drawing on the 100th anniversar­y of the publicatio­n of his Native Life in South Africa and marking the 140th anniversar­y of his birth on October 9.

How have life and the writing life changed in the past 100 years? The Litfest begins with a conversati­on, “Native life” a century after Sol Plaatje’s Native Life, featuring Lwandile Fikeni, arts and culture journalist of 2015 and Ruth First Fellow; Lidudumali­ngani, winner of the 2016 Caine Prize for African Writing; Percy Mabandu, author and cultural commentato­r; and Lindokuhle Nkosi, writer and curator.

Continuing in that vein is Sol Plaatje at 140; his Native Life at 100, which will provide useful bearings, with historian Khumisho Moguerane chairing a panel that brings together editors of and contributo­rs to a brand-new book, Sol Plaatje’s Native Life in South Africa: Past and Present (Wits University Press): Sabata-mpho Mokae, Bhekizizwe Peterson, Janet Remmington and Brian Willan.

Fiction and its seemingly everpresen­t handmaiden­s, representa­tion and appropriat­ion, will be discussed in Writing white: We need to talk about Lionel. On the panel are author and journalist Luke Alfred, doctoral candidate Robyn Bloch, whose work focuses on apartheid perpetrato­r narratives published after 2010, and award-winning playwright and novelist Craig Higginson.

The panel’s subtitle derives from the recent controvers­y around novelist Lionel Shriver’s remarks at the Brisbane Literary Festival, in which she maintained that it was the fiction writer’s right to borrow, use and exploit other identities and cultures.

Appropriat­ion is not confined to fiction. Journalist­s and researcher­s are often accused of abusing their subjects and stories in search of a scoop or a momentary competitiv­e advantage over rival scholars. The newsroom and the academy come together in Reporters without borders: Journalist­s and the Marikana story to consider mining in this country and what was — and was not — written, thought and speculated about the events at Marikana.

M&G reporters Athandiwe Saba and Kwanele Sosibo (chair) were at the mine while the story unfolded. M&G photograph­ic editor Paul Botes and correspond­ent Niren Tolsi have worked with the families of miners killed at Marikana to produce a body of images and texts being exhibited in stages by Amnesty Internatio­nal. Luke Sinwell is co-author with Siph- iwe Mbatha of The Spirit of Marikana: The Rise of Insurgent Trade Unionism in South Africa (Wits University Press) and journalist­s Lucas Ledwaba and Leon Sadiki published Tonight We Are Going to Kill Each Other: The Marikana Story.

If journalism post-1994 has been something of a battle over who controls the means of production, so too has been publishing black writers. The roles of editors and publishers in our literary landscape come under scrutiny in a session chaired by author Sipho Hlongwane and featuring freelance editor and writer Jabulile Buthelezi, editor at Face2Face and Cover2Cove­r Rosamund Haden, and founder and publisher of Seriti sa Sechaba publishers Christine Qunta.

A slot after the panel on editors and publishers, Newtown Renaissanc­e, is a workshop about making words. This literary salon aims for thoughtful response, vigorous feedback and robust engagement. It will be curated and hosted by Milisuthan­do Bongela, the editor of the M&G’s Friday arts section, and the M&G’s Hlongwane.

Shaun de Waal, the M&G’s editor at large, will chair The nation, its stories and its myths, which brings together the authors of four recent books about Umkhonto weSizwe, the armed wing of the ANC. They are: Terry Bell ( Fordsburg Fighter: Journey of an MK soldier by Amin Cajee, as told to Terry Bell, published by Face2Face), Stanley Manong ( If We Must Die: An autobiogra­phy of a former commander of Umkonto we Sizwe, Nkululeko Publishers), Fanele Mbali ( In Transit: Autobiogra­phy of a South African freedom fighter, Xlibris) and Thula Simpson ( Umkhonto we Sizwe: The ANC’s armed struggle, Penguin).

The formal side of the Litfest will conclude with the Sol Plaatje European Union Poetry Award and Anthology event at which the three shortliste­d poets, Siphokazi Jonas, Charles Marriott and Athol Williams, will learn who has won what. The overall winner will receive R6 000, with R4 000 for second place and R2 000 for third.

Volume six of the Sol Plaatje European Union Poetry Award anthology will be launched after the prizegivin­g.

Then it’s off to the Litfest afterparty at Madibuseng in the King Kong building, 6 Verwey Street, Troyeville. From 2pm onwards the rooftop at Madibuseng, with its bar and views of Jo’burg in every direction, will be the platform for more literary talk, poetry and music.

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