Mail & Guardian

THE PORTFOLIO The Nest

- Jill Bradbury

‘The Narrative Enquiry for Social Transforma­tion (Nest) research network was launched in 2015 at the University of the Witwatersr­and, Johannesbu­rg. At this first conference, we screened the acclaimed documentar­y, Zwelidumil­e, which Bhekizizwe Peterson made together with his life-long collaborat­or and friend, Ramadan Suleman. The work celebrates Dumile Feni’s extraordin­ary artistic vision of the world, of black life traumatica­lly exiled from home. Through the particular­ities of this exceptiona­l life, the film traces the ways in which art is knitted into intergener­ational family life and in living relations between people.

It represents the quintessen­tial texture and tone of Bheki Peterson’s unique form of narrative scholarshi­p, traversing the discipline­s of film, visual art and music, never flinching in the face of contradict­ions and complexiti­es, and raising questions without offering any neat answers for closure in the ongoing quest for meaning-making about the past and potential futures.

This was the beginning of a remarkable interdisci­plinary partnershi­p and close collaborat­ion that shaped the contours of Nest. The subsequent Nest conference­s were always multimodal, exploring vibrant alternativ­e narrative resources for interpreti­ng the world through dance, music, visual art and poetry.

These events were deliberate­ly egalitaria­n in design, providing space for young scholars and students to present their work alongside renowned internatio­nal keynote speakers. They were forums characteri­sed by vociferous debate, sometimes bitter disagreeme­nts about critical political and intellectu­al positions. Prof Peterson was always the quiet authoritat­ive voice that insisted on respectful attention to one another, enabling possibilit­ies for deep learning and change.

Interdisci­plinary work, if it is conducted with the serious intent of generating new intersecti­onal spaces of knowledge, is difficult and risky. We spent a lot of time in conversati­on and in writing, undoing and unravellin­g the knotty confluence­s between our home discipline­s of literature and psychology to release new threads of meaning-making. As we worked together, he would sometimes discover lacunae in my knowledge. He would look at me

with admonishin­g disappoint­ment, and then generously and patiently proceed to open yet another door to new vistas on the world, new pathways for reading, thinking, looking and listening.

Professor Peterson was that rare scholar who was a much-loved teacher. He never saw teaching as secondary to the more prestigiou­s domain of research and his scholarshi­p was always active in the seminar room.

He was intolerant of trending fads or short cuts that skimmed over long, expansive histories of thought.

He expected wholeheart­ed engagement from students, a willingnes­s to commit themselves with integrity the way he himself did, and coaxing them to find their unique voices and cultivate their own research niches.

He was increasing­ly saddened, disillusio­ned and infuriated by the ways in which the commodific­ation of higher education, petty institutio­nal politickin­g and strangling bureaucrat­ic procedures are eroding the possibilit­ies for these forms of praxis.

Bheki embodied collegiali­ty, collaborat­ion and comradeshi­p. He had an extraordin­ary capacity for giving

of his time and himself — conversati­ons with Bheki were always longer than expected.

Some of our most generative discussion­s unfolded while walking across campus or stopping to sit in the sun on the steps of the great hall or on a bench somewhere between our offices.

And typically, talking happened over shared food — lunch at the Wits Arts Museum, where every second person needed to catch him for a quick chat, or more leisurely at the Wits club, where the waitrons knew to find him a table in the sun, always bring extra chillies and, when he was able to indulge, red wine.

These lunches might have had a work agenda, but they were always convivial, fun and peppered with Bheki’s wicked sense of humour.

In the past year with campus closed, we have met for long, Zooming conversati­ons ranging across theoretica­l ideas to mundane organisati­onal matters, dissecting the news — horrifying, hilarious or of the head-shaking Eish! variety — and always caring talk about students and families.

Bheki constantly reminded us that, as important and serious as our commitment­s to intellectu­al work might be, this is only one domain of meaningful action, and he was animated by the ongoing practices of culture as resistance in everyday life.

Even in the throes of desperate, despairing life in the wake of traumatic histories and in the enraging violent inequaliti­es of the present, people have a remarkable capacity for imaginatio­n, for interpreta­tion, critical hopeful action, joy and beauty.

Nest work happens beyond the academy, in collaborat­ion with Youth of the South in Dobsonvill­e, Soweto — a project initiated and run by Nest affiliates Hayley Haynesrola­ndo and Phethile Zitha. Here, narrative provides the muscle for psychosoci­al work and participat­ory action research, enabling young people to read the world and themselves in new ways.

Bheki’s passion for the invigorati­on of the black public humanities and intergener­ational storytelli­ng is articulate­d in this project, and in the complement­ary focus on the narratives of the older generation in the “grandparen­ts project” co-ordinated by Professor Hugo Canham. Bheki was enthusiast­ically embarking on the consolidat­ion of this work in a documentar­y film project with the Greater Dobsonvill­e Heritage Foundation — one of many future gifts that we have lost.

The Nest logo was Bheki’s design, replacing somewhat concrete earlier versions that did not meet his exacting aesthetic standards. The giant baobab speaks to us of Bheki’s life and work, rooted in the ancient soil of Africa, with wide-spreading branches reaching towards the blue skies, holding many nesting spots for nurturing young scholars and incubating beautiful creative ideas.

Bheki’s life story may have come to an end, but his narrative breath flows in all of us who are willing to do the work to create meaningful lives for ourselves and others.

He would want us to continue to wrestle with questions that matter: how can we engage the long history and broad terrain of the African continent in making forms of knowledge for the future?

What does it mean to be human in dehumanisi­ng and inhumane conditions? —

 ?? Photo: Hugh Mdlalose ?? His story: Bheki Peterson breathed life into those wanting to create meaningful lives for themselves and others.
Photo: Hugh Mdlalose His story: Bheki Peterson breathed life into those wanting to create meaningful lives for themselves and others.

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