Sindiwe Magona is a celebrated South African writer, storyteller and motivational speaker known mainly for her autobiographies, biographies, novels, short stories, poetry and children's books. I Write the Yawning Void is a collection of essays that highlight her engagement with writing that span the transition from apartheid to the post-apartheid period and addresses themes such as HIV/Aids, language and culture, home and belonging.
Magona worked as a teacher, domestic worker and spent two decades working for the United Nations in the United States of America. She has received many awards for her fierce and fearless writing 'truth to power'. Her written work is often informed by her lived experience of being a black woman resisting subjugation and poverty.

These essays bring to life many facets of Magona's personal history as well as her deepest convictions, her love for her country and despair at the problems that continue to plague it, and her belief in her ability to activate change. They demonstrate Magona's engaging storytelling and mastery of the essay form which serve as meaningful supplements to her fictional works, while simultaneously offering direct and insightful responses to the conditions that inspired them.
Through her essays Magona offers a reimagining of a broken society and the role literature can play in casting new light on old wounds.

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Sindiwe Magona is a celebrated South African writer, storyteller and motivational speaker known mainly for her autobiographies, biographies, novels, short stories, poetry and children’s books. This is a collection of essays that highlight her engagement with writing that span the transition from apartheid to the post-apartheid.
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  • Editor’s Introduction: I Write the Yawning Void – Renée Schatteman
  • Author’s Introduction: Writing South Africa’s Yawning Void – Sindiwe Magona
  • Part I: Coming to Writing
  • Chapter 1 The Scars of Umlungu
  • Chapter 2 Clawing at Stones
  • Chapter 3 Finding My Way Home
  • Chapter 4 It is in the Blood: Trauma and Memory in the South African Novel
  • Part II: Writing About Pressing Issues
  • Chapter 5 Address at the Funeral of a Young Woman
  • Chapter 6 Do Not Choose Poverty
  • Chapter 7 Cry, the Beloved Language
  • Chapter 8 We Are All Racists!
  • Part III: Writing About My Writing
  • Chapter 9 Why I Wrote My Autobiographies
  • Chapter 10 Why I Wrote Mother to Mother
  • Chapter 11 Why I Wrote Beauty’s Gift
  • Chapter 12 Why I Wrote Chasing the Tails of My Father’s Cattle
  • Chapter 13 Why I Wrote When the Village Sleeps
  • Chapter 14 Why I Write Children’s Stories
  • Conclusion: A Tribute To Those Who Paved The Way: André Brink And Other S/Heroes
  • Contributors
  • Index
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A selection of essays about writing, life and the South African condition by Sindiwe Magona, one of South Africa’s most significant woman writers.

Sindiwe Magona’s essays are a spontaneous overflow of the profound compassion she feels for the ‘deep-seated hurt’ in the hearts and souls of South Africans … Her essays are a brave and moving witness to her enduring faith in the long journey that is writing, and being human. – Kobus Moolman, poet, playwright and Professor of Creative Writing at the University of the Western Cape

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781776148189
Publisert
2023-07-01
Utgiver
Wits University Press
Vekt
358 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
G, P, 01, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
328

Forfatter
Samlet av

Biografisk notat

Sindiwe Magona is an internationally renowned South African writer who has received many awards and widespread recognition for her writing, her activism and humanitarian work. She has written novels, children's books, short stories, poetry, biographies, autobiographies, essays, radio plays, and a screenplay. Magona was awarded the Order of iKhamanga by the President of the Republic of South Africa in 2011. She is Senior Research Fellow at the University of the Western Cape, South Africa.

Renée Schatteman is Associate Professor at Georgia State University (USA) specialising in postcolonial literature. Among other books she is the co-author of Voices from the Continent, a three-volume curriculum guide to African literature and co-editor of Five Points: Special Issue on the Writing and Art of South Africa.