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19 Mar 2010

Centre for Creative Arts

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Readings and Quotes from the 2010 Time of the Writer (Videos, Tweets)

March 15th, 2010 by Sharlene

TOW

The 13th annual Time of the Writer International Literature Festival concluded on Saturday after a week that was a veritable literary blur. BOOK SA livetweeted the final four sessions on Friday and Saturday evenings, and recorded readings from the four authors who appeared on stage. We bring you the best of BOOK SA’s coverage:

BOOK SA’s livetweeted photos


  1. BOOKSA Sihle Khumalo & Ndumiso Ngcobo #tow10 http://flic.kr/p/7KbK8P
  2. BOOKSA The new Wordsetc cover – ‘Crime’ issue, featuring Margie Orford #tow10 http://flic.kr/p/7KbML8
  3. BOOKSA The Ningizimu Steel & Marimba band #tow10 http://flic.kr/p/7KfV6C
  4. BOOKSA Priya Narismulu, Elana Bregin & Thando Mgqolozana #tow10 http://flic.kr/p/7Kcezx
  5. BOOKSA Imraan Coovadia, Ndumiso Ngcobo, Sihle Khumalo #tow10 http://flic.kr/p/7Kd19t
  6. BOOKSA Zakes Mda, Sally-Ann Murray, Johan Jacobs #tow10 http://flic.kr/p/7Ku8vG
  7. BOOKSA Aher Arop Bol, William Gumede #tow10 http://flic.kr/p/7KufBj

Readings: videos

Thando Mgqolozana reads from A Man Who is Not a Man

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Elana Bregin reads from Shiva’s Dance

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Sally-Ann Murray reads from Small Moving Parts

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Zakes Mda reads from Cion

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More livetweets – session highlights

Ndumiso Ngcobo and Sihle Khumalo in conversation with Imraan Coovadia:

  1. BOOKSA #tow10 …and we’re back! On stage now: Ndumiso Ngcobo (Is it Cos I’m Black) and Sihle Khumalo (Heart of Africa) hosted by Imraan Coovadia
  2. BOOKSA #tow10 Ngcobo: Let’s quickly correct the name of the province. The name of the province is KwaZuma Natal.
  3. BOOKSA #tow10 Ngcobo: definitely, because, unlike in other countries where sex sells, in SA, *race* sells
  4. BOOKSA #tow10 Khumalo: “Obviously if someone has touched your goat, you’re going to want the lobola”
  5. BOOKSA #tow10 Coovadia: “One more question from me before we allow the audience to make 10 minute speeches”
  6. BOOKSA #tow10 Now Elinor Sisulu has the mic, makes the point that in many African countries – incl Zim – the men on stage might well be in jail
  7. BOOKSA #tow10 Ngcobo, answering a question about whether Castle Lager makes him more creative: “Yeah, pretty much.”
  8. BOOKSA #tow10 Khumalo: “My family don’t laugh at funerals. We take it as against the… the culture”. Ngcobo: “You’re boring.”

Andile Mngxitama and William Gumede in conversation with Karabo Kgoleng:

  1. BOOKSA #tow10 The title of tonight’s first panel is “Writing, Truth and Power”
  2. BOOKSA #tow10 Mngxitama: in SA, the truth is intertwined with the “black excluded”, who are outside of power
  3. BOOKSA #tow10 Mngxitama “One problem is that we are cowards in this country. Look at the ANC/Eskom scandal. It’s robbery. We do nothing.”
  4. BOOKSA #tow10 Mngxitama: “And look at the 2010 World Cup. We’ve been robbed again. And this time by Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu.”
  5. BOOKSA #tow10 Gumede: “If you live in a rural part of Africa, how much of the truth, as it relates to power, can you actually know?”
  6. BOOKSA #tow10 Gumede: “If we’re not going to speak truth to power, we’re not going to prosper”
  7. BOOKSA #tow10 Mngxitama: “I promised to attack black SA writers this evening” so here goes. Post-1994 black writing – its underlying politics….
  8. BOOKSA #tow10 Mngxitama …is very problematic. Black writers chase white women readers – the main reading demographic – too hard.
  9. BOOKSA #tow10 Mngxitama moves on to Zakes Mda’s Black Diamond. By writing about BEE the way Mda does, the black bourgeoisie is highlighted…
  10. BOOKSA #tow10 Mngxitama: …and the unequal system powered by white wealth that created it is normalised. The danger is that we’ll reinternalise it

 

Notes from the Time of the Writer: New Frank Talk; Aher Arop Bol and Leonara Miano; Uwem Akpan and Imraan Coovadia

March 12th, 2010 by Nadia

Notes and galleries from recent Time of the Writer events

Andile Mngxitama

The launch of Andile Mngxitama’s latest New Frank Talk pamphlet

The fifth issue of the New Frank Talk series, titled White Revolutionaries as Missionaries?, was launched by series editor and founder Andile Mngxitama at the Wellington Tavern Deck at the Elizabeth Sneddon Theatre this week.

Black Consciousness revivalist Mngxitama has had a hand in four publications recently: From Mbeki to Zuma, Why Biko Wouldn’t Vote and Black Colonialsists: the Trouble with Africa, which he wrote for the New Frank Talk series, plus Biko Lives! Contesting the Legacies of Steve Biko<, which he co-edited for Pan Macmillan.

The fifth NFT book is edited by Heinrich Böhmke, who spoke about his involvement with social movements at the launch.

“I’ve been involved since 1999, when the Concerned Community Forum and the people of Wentworth put marches together against Mbeki’s policies.

“About two years ago, I felt uncomfortable with middle class academics, mostly whites, so-called activists who were promoting themselves in their careers, and wore their suffering on their sleeves,” he said.

His essay is essentially about the motivations of and roles played by white people in black struggles, taking as its departure point a missionary named Stephen Kay who published Travels and Researches in Caffraria in 1843, describing the character, customs and moral condition of the peoples inhabiting portions of Southern Africa.

Mngxitama, who holds an MA in Sociology from the University of Witwatersrand, said he was delighted to be in Durban for the launch.
“Black Consciousness was founded here, Strini Moodley and Steve Biko did a lot of work to unite black people at that particular era, so it was like coming back home,” he said.

Mngxitama also related some personal thoughts on Black Consciousness in the 21st Century, quoting the Winnie Mandela of the recent and controversial Nadira Naipaul “interview”, in which she says that Nelson Mandela sold South Africans out, that black people were excluded economically, and that those blacks who were included were merely tokens.

“Those of us in BC did not have to hear this, because we already knew it. Our freedom has been compromised for a long time. It’s interesting to see the responses – white people’s first reaction to her statement is to protect Mandela and project Winnie as a mad, black woman,” he remarked.

Mngxitama also asked the question, “What makes us understand that democracy has not liberated the majority of black people? How did we move from wanting freedom to fighting for RDP houses?” People who were prepared to die for freedom before, now accept so little.

“In this book, Böhmke exposes how the process of conversion works, and he goes 185 years back to reveal it. He writes very well, showing how the missionary used the bible to convert black people. The same thing happens now, with the ‘new missionaries’ using the constitution to convert black people to perform the same job” of co-option.

Mngxitama concluded by saying that with white revolutionaries, all are not bad, but the way their interests are organised makes it impossible for them to come together with BC organisations.

Heinrich BohmkeAndile MngxitamaNew Frank TalkNew Frank TalkHeinrich Bohmke, Andile Mngxitama, Imrann MoosaPatrick Mkhize, Heinrich Bohmke, Andile Mngxitama

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Betty GovindenAher Arop Bol and Leonara Miano

Writing Home

Literary enthusiasts and writers have been converging on UKZN’s Elizabeth Sneddon Theatre for the evening sessions of the 13th Time of the Writer Festival. Earlier this week, the first order of the night was to present the prestigious Currie Award, given to Dr Betty Govinden for her contribution as a South African Indian woman to SA society and letters. Dr Govinden received the award for her book, Sister Outsiders.

After that it was time for writers Aher Arop Bol of Sudan/SA and Leonara Miano of Cameroon/France to address the audience with the help of faciltator Lindy Stiebel.

Aher Arop Bol’s The Lost Boy tells the tale of the journey of a small Sudanese boy in 1987, who is carried into the Panyido Refugee Camp, Ethiopia, on the shoulders of his uncle. He does not know why he is there or if he ever will see his parents again. The boy, of course, is Bol, who is launched upon an epic quest for survival, education,and a refusal to remain “lost”. Bol now lives in South Africa, studying for an LLB at UNISA, and running a spaza shop in Pretoria, the income from which he uses to support his brothers in Uganda.

Leonara Miana, widely-recognised in Francophone literary circles, writes with an uncompromising view, and doesn’t shrink from what she sees. Her latest offering, Les aubes ecarlates, follows child soldier Epa on a journey that intimately examines the memory of slavery on the Afrcian continent and the scars it has left. Her book will be launched in English in America in April.

“My book is about my homeland,” said Bol. “I had to learn about the problems it faced from the outside world.”

“Home,” he continued, “is where people recognise you.”

Miano countered, “I don’t have a home and I’m not looking for one.” She loves living with mixed cultures, which is part and parcel of the life of a true artist, in her opinion – but she also believes in active change, and strives to take part in transforming “Old France” into a place that will be better for children.

Betty GovindenLeonara MianoAher Arop BolAher Arop BolThe Lost Boy by Aher Arop Bol

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Uwem Akpan, Karabo Kgoleng and Imraan Coovadia

Why I Write What I Write

Another of the Time of the Writer’s evening talks had award-winning Nigerian author Uwem Akpan discussing his book of short stories, Say You’re One of Them, which was featured on Oprah Winfrey’s Book Club in September 2009, the first book of short stories ever chosen by Winfrey.

Akpan was paired with the sharp, witty Imraan Coovadia of South Africa, whose latest novel is High Low In-between. This riveting read is born of the current, post-apartheid dispensation, and turn on several themes, including human suffering and death. “Suffering is real in the world, people die and people get hurt,” said Coovadia.

Akpan’s book highlights the perspective of children’s suffering, whereas Coovadia’s sends a woman into widowhood and the painful aftermath. Both writers, hosted on stage by Karabo Kgoleng, believe that working in fiction allows them the greatest freedom of exploration in writing.

When questioned on the youth of today and what democracy means to them, Coovadia said, to laughter, that strongly believes the youth are a lost cause – and they have their parents to blame. “There’s a disconnection between parents and teenagers, but hopefully the future generations will be better. Keep them away from this one!”

Imraan CoovadiaUwem Akpan and Karabo KgolengImraan CoovadiaUwem Akpan, Karabo Kgoleng, Imraan CoovadiaUwem Akpan and Karabo Kgolengg

However, Father Uwem believes not putting too much pessure on the youth to become who they are can make our lives richer.

 

Extract from Mike van Graan’s Time of the Writer Keynote Speech

March 12th, 2010 by Sharlene

The 13th Time of Writer Festival hosted by the Centre for Creative Arts (University of KwaZulu- Natal), began on Tuesday, March 9 at the Elizabeth Sneddon. Mike van Graan – writer, playwright and arts activist, delivered the keynote address entitled “The State of the Arts”. Below is an extract from this address.

The state of the arts

“There is no better metaphor that illustrates the state of the arts today than the recent furore around our Arts Minister and the black lesbian photographic exhibition.

But there is a broader frame for this 13th Time of the Writer Festival as it takes place in a most significant year for Africa. Not significant because of the FIFA World Cup, but rather because 2010 marks 50 years of independence for no less than 17 African countries.

The first point about the Innovative Women exhibition is that it took place on Constitution Hill. The Constitutional Court is the ultimate arbiter of what is good and bad, what is right and wrong, not in terms of some individual’s arbitrary moral prejudices or any party’s political agenda, but in terms of the country’s Constitution, the highest law of the land. Our Constitution affirms the fundamental right to freedom of creative expression and outlaws discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. What this incident has shown is that it doesn’t matter if rights are guaranteed on paper, those in power will always seek to create democracy in their self-serving image, so that the artistic space for freedom of expression can never simply be assumed; it needs to be asserted and defended in practice constantly.

This incident took place in August 2009 and yet the story only broke six months later. The question is why? Which brings me to my second point. I think it has to do with the culpability of artists in disempowering themselves. At the time, there was probably outrage, but a decision was taken not to cause a fuss, lest the new Zuma administration be alienated, thereby compromising future funding. Artists are complicit in their own disempowerment by keeping silent, by seeking to align their interests with those of the ruling elite. Censorship is enforced today not through apartheid-era censorship boards, but through informal forms of intimidation and the threat of withholding public funds; the resultant self-censorship compromises the practice of freedom of expression and shrinks democracy.

The third point to take note of in this story is the Minister’s contention that the exhibition did not contribute to social cohesion and nation-building. This goes to the core of the state of the arts in our country at the moment for it points to the conscription of the arts for some political or socially good end, rather than the arts being deemed to have value in their own right.

Post-apartheid cultural policy in the mid-nineties has shifted away from a human rights approach, with Article 27 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights being the touchstone: ‘everyone shall have the right freely to participate in the cultural life of the community and to enjoy the arts…’ to a neo-liberal, market-driven cultural industries paradigm. This has mean a shift away from “everyone shall have access to the arts” or the “the doors of learning and culture shall be open” Freedom Charter paradigm, to “everyone who can afford it or who has disposable income can access the arts”.

The fourth point arising out of this incident is that even if the minister rejected art for its own sake in favour of the more politically expedient, instrumental approach with the arts essentially being a vehicle for social cohesion and nation-building, her action makes no sense. Unless it is her view that black lesbians are not to be included in the nation. Or that social cohesion excludes one of the most marginalised groups in our society i.e. black lesbians. More than 30 black gay women have been murdered for no other reason than being gay. If the minister was serious about social inclusion and nation-building, then she would have made an extra effort to ensure that these women artists felt part of the South African nation.

One of the reasons suggested for the Minister’s boycott of the exhibition was that the exhibition stereotyped black women. Here is an exhibition by one of the most marginalised groups in our society, black lesbians, asserting their right to depict themselves as sensual, beautiful, human, loving and they are accused of “stereotyping black women”. This is not only an outrageous act of intellectual dishonesty, but yet another appropriation of race in order to legitimise a foolish act. For this is not the affirmation of blackness in the Biko sense of an inclusive identity for all those inferiorised by apartheid, nor of dignifying self-empowerment, nor the psychological affirmation of humanity and wholeness, but rather the all too common cry-wolf blackness that provides the banner under which opportunists pursue their self-enriching ends, fend off legitimate criticism, and in the process, compromise the real struggles of black people. The women who are most abused because of their sexual orientation are so abused precisely because they are black.

In conclusion, the state of the arts is not to be found in the amount of funding available. For, quite frankly, whatever the arts sector’s whining about the lack of funding, there has never been so much funding for the arts. The Department of Arts and Culture’s budget this year is in excess of R2 billion, more than 12 times what it was in 1994. The Lottery raises more than R250 million per year in funds for the sector. And certainly, with better vision, with greater political will, with increased levels of competence and strategic management capacity, the arts sector can do much better than it is now.

But for me, the health of the arts is to be analysed in terms of the democratisation of our society: the space created for freedom of artistic expression and for the arts sector to engage with those in power, the energy and willingness of artists to fight for and defend their rights, and the access which the poor, the vulnerable have to resources, infrastructure and the arts themselves to improve their lives.

We are seriously wanting in all of these, and our democracy is the poorer for it. That will only change when the arts sector begins to follow the lead of social movements in other sectors, and take up the cudgels to advance and defend their interests. No-one else will do it for us.

It is time of the writer, but also of the theatre maker, the musician, the dancer, the filmmaker and the visual artist to stand up and be counted.”

 

The 13th Time of the Writer International Literature Festival Opens: Notes, Gallery and Podcast

March 10th, 2010 by Sarah

Uwem Akpan, Elana Bregin and Aher Arop Bol

The Kholwa Brothers, an isicathamiya group from Durba,n set a mellow mood for the Opening Night of the Centre for the Creative Arts‘ (CCA) thirteenth annual Time of the Writer Festival which is being held in Durban this week. Peter Rorvik, Director of the CCA, invited each writer participating in the week’s events up on to the stage to explain why he or she writes. He expressed the hope that such direct engagement would nurture all readers and writers in the audience.

First up was Uwem Akpan, from Nigeria, who set African fiction on a new trajectory when his book, Say You’re One of Them was selected for Oprah’s Book Club last year. With an infectious laugh, Akpan said he writes about what worries him, which in this case is child trafficking, tribalism and genocide in Africa. He said he tries to personalise the stories he tells – in Say You’re One of Them by using the perspective of children. Next on stage was Aher Ahop Bol from the Sudan, author of the memoir, The Lost Boy, who explained that as a survivor he felt compelled to recount the story of the Sudanese war. Elana Bregin, an SA author, followed him, detailing her hesitancy at writing as a “white female fifty-plus voice”, but saying that when she is not writing, her life “does not make sense at all”.

Imraan Coovadia, a writer originally from Durban, most recently having published what has been termed an “angry post-apartheid” novel, High Low In-between, paradoxically said he was glad to be a writer in SA now, as he felt its democracy was thriving – a fact which was disputed by Andile Mngxitama, publisher of the New Frank Talk books, who said he was concerned about being a black writer in SA, which he labeled Nelson Mandela’s “failed project”. He said he sees writing as “a brick which we can throw at the government”.

Thando Mgqolozana, a writer originally from the Eastern Cape, said he writes about things that trouble and torture him. His book, A Man Who is Not a Man, addresses what he sees as a silence around male circumcision in SA. He said he was driven by anger and a desire to “show the”’. Similarly, Leonora Miano, from Cameroon and now living in France, said she writes as a way of dealing with pain and danger.

Sally Ann Murray, another Durban writer and poet, claimed her writing as a “way into a sense of self and place”.

Mike van Graan, playwright and arts activist, finished off the evening with a keynote address on the State of the Arts in SA. He emphasised the importance of writers proving that the “pen can be mightier than the sword”, asking whether development in Africa had actually enlarged peoples’ choices. He referred to Arts and Culture Minister Lulu Xingwana’s recent refusal to open an exhibition of black lesbian photographs on Constitutional Hill, saying that her excuse that her action was in the interest of “nation-building” undermined artists’ rights to self-expression. Van Graan called on SA artists to use their “soft power”, to keep producing despite a lack of government support. He called on Writers to Stand up and Be Counted.

Listen to a podcast of van Graan’s speech:

Flickr gallery

Jill Seldon, Dee Higginson, Ros SarkinAndile Mngxitama, Zukiswa Wanner, Britta RennkampFather Uwem Akpan, Mthamiz Luthuli, Mlungisi ShongweMerryl Raw, Graham and Vivien LancasterProf Johann Jacobs, Evelyn CresswellMikhil Peppas, Annie WebberNomusa Mtshwana, Lindiwe Khoza, BigBoy ZunguMthandeni Ngidi, Wonder ChabalalaBritta Rennkamp, Imraan CoovadiaKarl Becker, Julie FrederikseAndile MngxitamaAher Arop Bol, Tsholo Pelo, Karabo Kgoleng

 

Date for Project Submissions for Durban FilmMart Extended

March 2nd, 2010 by Sharlene

Plans for Durban’s inaugural FilmMart, jointly hosted by the Durban Film Office (DFO) and Durban International Film Festival (DIFF), go up a gear as the closing date for the submission of entries approaches.

“We are heartened by the submissions we are receiving from entrants throughout Africa,” says Toni Monty, acting CEO of the Durban Film Office. “In addition, we received significant interest from organisations and individual producers on our recent trip to the International Film Festival Rotterdam, where we launched the Durban FilmMart to the international community of producers and also established a partnership with the world-renowned Cinemart. The support for a well-structured forum giving the rest of the world access to African content and projects, is really encouraging.”

“We urge potential entrants to get their submissions in by the closing date of 29 March,” says Peter Rorvik, director of the Durban International Film Festival, “as the Durban FilmMart provides a perfect entry point for African film-makers to pitch film projects to leading financiers and network with international directors and producers.”

Projects with an African citizen attached to any one of the three creative roles of writer, director or producer are eligible to participate in the Durban FilmMart. These include fiction features, animation features and documentaries suitable for international co-production and distribution.

The Durban FilmMart is a joint project of the DFO and the Durban International Film Festival (DIFF) and will take place during the 31st Durban International Film Festival which runs from 22 July to 1 August. For more information on the Durban FilmMart and project submission visit www.durbanfilmoffice.com or contact Musonda Chimba at the DFO on +27 31 3114248 or by e-mail on chimbam@durban.gov.za.

 

13th Time of the Writer International Writers Festival, 9 – 13 March 2010

February 23rd, 2010 by Sharlene

TOW 2010

The written word will envelop Durban as writers from around South Africa and Africa arrive in Durban for a stimulating week of books, ideas and talk at the 13th Time of the Writer International Writers Festival (9-13 March). The festival, which is hosted by the Centre for Creative Arts (University of KwaZulu-Natal), will feature a diverse gathering of novelists, short story writers, humour writers and political commentators. Within a precarious funding climate the Department of Arts and Culture has provided valued core support to make the production of this year’s Time of the Writer possible and thereby help sustain this important platform which brings literature into the public domain. Time of the Writer will also host a tribute evening to the life, creativity and activism of the late Dennis Brutus as the culmination of a full-day colloquium organised by the Centre for Civil Society (UKZN).

The writers at the festival include Nigerian Uwem Akpan, whose brilliantly-crafted and nuanced debut collection of stories, Say You’re One of Them, won last year’s Commonwealth Writers’ Prize for Best First Book – Africa Region. Akpan’s collection was also selected late last year by Oprah Winfrey’s Book Club, a prized honour in the publishing world. Joining him in the panel discussion, “Why I Write What I Write”, will be the Durban-born Imraan Coovadia. Coovadia has established himself over three provoking and intelligent novels, as one of the leading contemporary South African writers. Zakes Mda, a true giant of the South African literary landscape, makes a welcome return to the festival, having just published Black Diamond, which The Weekender called: “a defiantly revealing novel about contemporary South Africa…sane and insane, evocative and hilarious…” The prolific Mda is the author of South African classics such as The Whale Caller, The Madonna of Excelsior, The Heart of Redness and Ways of Dying, amongst others.

The award-winning playwright, journalist and acts activist Mike van Graan, author of plays such Bafana Republic amongst numerous others, will deliver the festival’s Opening Night Keynote Address, entitled “The State of the Arts”. Durban is represented by Sally-Ann Murray, a well-established and prize-winning poet, whose debut novel Small Moving Parts was published last year. Constructed with an astonishing sense of place and detail it is a powerful book that adds a new texture to Durban’s ever-expanding literary narrative. Fellow Durbanite Elana Bregin is a versatile author whose work spans youth fiction to genre-bending biography. Her latest novel Shiva’s Dance has been excellently received.

Thando Mgqolozana hails from the Eastern Cape and his sensitive debut novel A Man Who is Not a Man tells of the trauma a young Xhosa man experiences after his initiation circumcision goes wrong.

William Gumede is one of South Africa’s most prominent public intellectuals and was the author of the best-selling Thabo Mbeki and the Battle for the Soul of the ANC and more recently The Poverty of Ideas (with Leslie Dikeni). Gumede will be in conversation with Andile Mngxitama, a Black Consciousness thinker, organizer and columnist. Mngxitama co-edited Biko Lives! Contesting the Legacies of Steve Biko and is the publisher of New Frank Talk, a journal of critical essays on the black condition. The latest issue of the journal will be launched at the festival. Other launches include Anton Krueger’s debut novel Sunnyside Sal (Deep South) on Friday 12 March and Andy Mason and John CurtisDon’t Joke! The Year in Cartoons on Saturday 13 March. Mason and Curtis, along with several other Durban cartoonists will also conduct the workshop “Don’t Joke! The Changing Face of South African Political Cartooning” at the BAT Centre’s Mission Control on Saturday 13 March at 13h30. The workshop forms part of a trio organised by the fest at the BAT on the day, the other two encompassing creative writing and children’s writing.

“What’s So Funny About Africa?” is the title of the enticing panel that will see Sihle Khumalo and Ndumiso Ngcobo, two of South Africa’s top humourists in discussion. Khumalo’s humourous travelogues Dark Continent, My Black Arse and Heart of Africa have marked him as a witty and astute observer. Ngcobo is a writer and satirist of razor-sharp wit, whose books Some of My Best Friends Are White and Is It Coz I’m Black? contain some of the most irreverent writing currently in South African bookstores.

On Thursday March 11, the festival, in partnership with the Centre for Civil Society (UKZN), will present A Dennis Brutus Tribute Evening (17:30 – 21.00pm), while the CCS itself will present A Dennis Brutus Poetry and Protest Colloquium (09h30-17h00) at Howard College Theatre (UKZN). The colloquium will explore aspects of Brutus’ political and literary legacy in the robust, self-critical style he would have welcomed, with an emphasis on how his life might offer pointers to our own futures. The Dennis Brutus Tribute Evening at the Sneddon is divided into two sections the first (17h30 – 19h00) “Dennis Brutus: Life, Literature, Politics And Mandates To Us All” features panelists such as Ashwin Desai, Fatima Meer, Trevor Ngwane, Eunice Sahle and internationally renowned sports writer David Zirin. The second section (19h30 – 21h00) is a Harold Wolpe/Dennis Brutus Memorial Lecture entitled “Fighting Global Apartheid” by Yash Tandon, the Ugandan political activist, professor, author and public intellectual.

Apart from Uwem Akpan, Africa is further represented by Léonora Miano, a Cameroonian-French author who has written three acclaimed and prize-winning novels and Aher Arop Bol, whose debut, The Lost Boy, about the author’s escape from the Sudan is an epic quest for survival, education, family, and meaning.

Readings, discussions and book launches will take place nightly at the Elizabeth Sneddon Theatre at the University of KwaZulu-Natal. A broad range of day activities in the form of seminars, workshops, school visits, and a prison writing programme, are formulated to promote a culture of reading, writing and creative expression. The Hon. Ms. Lulu Xingwana, the Minister of Arts and Culture will attend the festival and handover the prizes for the Schools Writing Competition. The competition, which accepts entries in English, Zulu, and Afrikaans, has, over the years, proved to be one of the central development components of the festival.

Time of the Writer’s extensive programme of activities and culturally diverse line-up of writers promise to deliver a dynamic literary platform for dialogue and exchange on wide-ranging themes and offers a rare opportunity to gain insight into the many facets that inform the art of writing.

Except for Thursday, 11 March, which is free, tickets are R25 for the evening sessions, R10 for students, and can be purchased through Computicket or at the door one hour before the event. Workshops and seminars are free.

Visit www.cca.ukzn.ac.za for the full programme of activities, biographies, and photos of participants or contact the University of KwaZulu-Natal’s Centre for Creative Arts for more information on 031 260 2506/1816 or e-mail cca@ukzn.ac.za.

Organised by the Centre for Creative Arts (University of KwaZulu-Natal), the 13th Time of the Writer festival is funded principally by the Department of Arts and Culture, with valued support from Humanist Institute for Development Cooperation (HIVOS), French Institute of South Africa, Centre for Civil Society (UKZN), and the City of Durban

 

Call for Project Submissions for Inaugural Durban FilmMart

February 10th, 2010 by Sharlene

Following an announcement earlier this year, by the Durban Film Office (DFO) and Durban International Film Festival (DIFF) to host the first international film co-production market on the African continent, organisers are calling for the submission of projects for consideration for the inaugural Durban FilmMart.

“This first African co-production market has the potential to act as a key driver in raising the visibility of film content from Africa,” says Toni Monty, acting CEO of the DFO. “We envisage that it will provide African film-makers with the opportunity to pitch film projects to leading financiers and meet and network with internationally reputed directors and producers in order to form alliances for future collaborations”

Projects with an African citizen attached to one of the three creative roles of writer, director or producer are eligible to participate in the inaugural Durban FilmMart. These include fiction features, animation features and documentaries suitable for international co-production and distribution

“We expect the FilmMart to be a place for film financiers to locate fundable African projects and encourage project collaboration between African film-makers from different African countries and through this forum redress the current scarcity of film production on this continent. In fact, it is hoped that the Durban FilmMart will become a valuable feeder stage for established co-production markets across the globe,” says Peter Rorvik, director of the Centre for Creative Arts/DIFF.

The Durban FilmMart promises to be a further catalyst for growth in the region by becoming one of the key events of the South African and African film industry and a focal point to interface with global parties and stimulate interest and activity in the city and the province.

The Durban FilmMart will be a joint project of the DFO and the DIFF and will take place in July during the 31st Durban International Film Festival (22 July – 1 August). For more information on the Durban FilmMart and project submissions visit the website on www.durbanfilmoffice.com or contact Musonda Chimba:

Musonda Chimba
Durban Film Office : +27 31 3114248
E-mail: chimbam@durban.gov.za

NOTES

The Durban Film Office (DFO) is the film-industry development arm of the Ethekwini Municipality, mandated to position Durban as a world-class film production destination and facilitator for the development of the local film industry. The DFO drives activity and development in the sector in order to boost tourism, job creation and the development of core skills and SMME’s in the region. The organization is also actively seeking and creating opportunities for setting the benchmark as the leading authority in the field in South Africa.

The Durban International Film Festival (DIFF) is a flagship project of the Centre for Creative Arts (University of KwaZulu-Natal). The CCA facilitates creative platforms and economic opportunities for artists and related industries, intercultural exchange and network development, training, audience development and strategic Pan-African and international cooperation in the cultural sectors. The CCA also produces three other major annual festivals – Time of the Writer, Jomba! Contemporary Dance Experience and Poetry Africa. www.cca.ukzn.ac.za

 

13th Time of the Writer Festival 9 – 13 March: Short Story Competition for Learners

February 3rd, 2010 by Sharlene

The Centre for Creative Arts (University of KwaZulu-Natal) will host the 13th Time of the Writer, international writers’ festival from 9 to 13th March 2010. The festival will bring a host of local and African authors, offering a valuable opportunity for the public to gain insight into the creative processes and perspectives which inform their writing.

Evening readings, book launches and discussions will take place at the Elizabeth Sneddon Theatre, University of KwaZulu Natal, Durban. Wide-reaching day activities, including school visits, are spread across Durban and surrounding areas as part of the festival’s ongoing effort to promote and nurture a culture of reading, writing and creative expression, particularly among the youth.

Time of the Writer invites learners to submit material for the short story writing competition to be held in conjunction with the festival. Learners are invited to engage creatively with a theme of their choice. Please make your submissions by no later than WEDNESDAY, 17 FEBRUARY and our judges will then make the final selection. Please note that entries must be fictional stories and not critical essays. A maximum of 5 pages (preferably typed) are to be written in either English, Zulu or Afrikaans. Illegible entries will not be considered.

Winners will be awarded cash prizes and given complimentary tickets to attend the festival, where they will be handed their prizes. If you are a learner and would like to be involved in this competition – submit your stories, together with your school’s name, teacher’s name, and your school telephone number to the Centre for Creative Arts. Entries may be hand delivered to the Centre, e-mailed to cca@ukzn.ac.za, faxed to 031 260 3074 or posted to

TIME OF THE WRITER FESTIVAL
CENTRE FOR CREATIVE ARTS
UNIVERSITY OF KWAZULU-NATAL
HOWARD COLLEGE CAMPUS
MAZISI KUNENE AVENUE
DURBAN 4041

For more information on the festival or the competition, please contact the Centre for Creative Arts on 031 260 2506/1704 or email cca@ukzn.ac.za or visit our website: www.cca.ukzn.ac.za.

Time of the Writer 2010 is supported by the Department of Arts and Culture, the French Institute of South Africa, Humanist Institute for Development Cooperation (HIVOS), City of Durban, Adams Campus Books, Elizabeth Sneddon Theatre and the University of KwaZulu-Natal.

 

Call for Entries: 3rd Talent Campus Durban 23 -27 July

January 25th, 2010 by Sharlene

Talent CampusThe 31st Durban International Film Festival (22 July – 2 August 2010) is proud to announce the 3rd edition of Talent Campus Durban from 23 – 27 July 2010, an intensive 5-day programme of workshops and seminars delivered by film professionals to enhance both theoretical and practical approaches to filmmaking.

The 3rd Talent Campus Durban theme Focusing on Africa: Unleashing Talent in 2010 will focus activities towards the development and strengthening of partnerships between African filmmakers.

Talent Campus Durban invites filmmakers from Africa to apply to participate in these workshops and seminars, which take place in Durban, South Africa, over five days. In addition to specific activities offered by the Campus, the selected talents will have the opportunity to attend films and events at the 31st Durban International Film Festival.

Deadline for application: 15 March 2010

Full Rules and Regulations can be downloaded from: www.cca.ukzn.ac.za/talentdiff2010.htm

For further details:
Phone: +27 (0)31 260 2506/1367
Fax: +27 (0)31 260 3074
Email: talent_AT_ukzn.ac.za or talent.durban_AT_gmail.com

Talent Campus Durban is produced as a cooperation between the Durban International Film Festival and the Berlinale Talent Campus, and Berlin International Film Festival and is supported by the German Embassy in South Africa, the Goethe-Institut South Africa and the Department of Economic Development – KwaZulu-Natal.

The Durban International Film Festival is organised by the Centre for Creative Arts (UKZN) with principle funding and support from the National Film & Video Foundation, HIVOS and the City of Durban.

 

Anindita Sengupta’s Thoughts on Poetry Africa 2009

October 27th, 2009 by Sharlene

Anindita SenguptaAnindita Sengupta was a participant in the recently-concluded Poetry Africa 2009. She shares her thoughts on the event:

I’ve been thinking about the intense, complex energies of South Africa which were spectacularly on display at the festival. What I found most fascinating about Poetry Africa was the diversity of the types of poetry, which ranged from rap / slam to poetry with music and quieter ‘page’ poetry. It was interesting because the old argument of ‘what is poetry’ starts kicking about in lively fashion in a place where a bunch of poems look totally unlike each other. At one poet’s forum (called an ‘indaba‘), it got a bit heated as seventeen different poets debated definition, purpose and aesthetics with the full knowledge that these debates can never reach any definite conclusion but are important to have in any case. Something new to me — apparently there are some South African poets using their poetry in advertisements and there were some charged debates about the ethics of commercialising poetry with some poets denouncing it and others justifying it with the argument that ‘if we can make money from poetry, why not?’ One rather surprising viewpoint was: ‘We are all selling something anyway — our opinions, our values etc — so why not shares or soap?’ Well, I’d rather be ’selling’ my own opinions than somebody else’s soap. But to each his own? Of course, I’m also curious to know what the quality of soap-selling poetry would be.