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Sarah Ruden
THOUGHTS ON MDA, NDEBELE AND BLACK SOUTH AFRICAN WRITING AT
THE MILLENNIUM
from Volume 28 Number 2: Summer/Fall 1998
It is a frequent complaint in South African literary circles that
the West is not giving black African literature a chance, because
of racial prejudice. Given the adoption of white anti-apartheid
writers into the Western canon, the neglect of black writers, both
anti- and post-apartheid, is supposed to be a glaringly bigoted
slight. As usual, claims about racism oversimplify. There are vast
cultural differences that make black African authors---even the
black authors writing in English in relatively cosmopolitan South
Africa---hard for Americans and Europeans to appreciate. But the
danger is that "cultural differences" will become the
new cop-out. Critics should really fight this one. With a demography
of the arts like the one that emerged during the late Roman Empire---original
talent coming from everywhere but the political center---becoming
clearer and clearer, there are reasons to bother about African
literature. The cultural differences themselves are a reason; unlike
anything conveyed by "multiculturalism" (a strange name
for a movement promoting the works of American minority writers
in a state of the most harmless, theme-park acculturation), they
are startling and interesting, worth going through some at first
uncongenial books to get at. Or this is how I found it, to the extent
that the playwright Zakes Mda and the fiction writer Njabulo Ndebele
became subversive pleasures of mine during the three years I spent
behind battlements of Western culture, teaching in the Classics
Department at the University of Cape Town.
But now I am hesitating, looking back at that first paragraph and
feeling dubious about the direction in which I am taking this essay.
I seem to be about to show myself as a bringer of American openness
to a benighted, colonized land; a discoverer and sharer of the fascinating
texts of an oppressed culture. But the truth is much cruder. I came
to African literature out of guilt and fear. I was extremely uncomfortable
teaching Plato and Juvenal to tiny numbers of well-to-do white students,
the only students I could attract. Whenever I became engrossed in
a course or in a research problem, my Quaker activities (I became
a "convinced Friend," or Quaker convert, in Boston while
I was finishing my doctorate at Harvard, the year before I moved
to South Africa) would interrupt and remind me how little I was
giving to the country through my job, and yet how well I got paid
compared to those South Africans who could not vote until 1994.
It was hard for me to believe what I was getting away with. I thought
that, any day, some person of integrity would investigate and pillory
me, and it was my panic that in the end made me (absurdly, of course)
resign from a tenure-track post. In the meantime, I began reading
Ndebele and Mda, planning in the back of my head to use my new knowledge---somehow---to
defend myself when I got caught.
I did not expect to admire these authors' work, and I still have
reservations. What kept me reading it, even after I left the University
of Cape Town, and even after I returned to the United States, was
the opportunity to experience another world---and, to some extent,
to experience it more vividly through the resistances its literature
evoked in me. It is these resistances---partly characterizing me
as a typical Westerner, partly, I am sure, just mine---I will concentrate
on in writing about Ndebele and Mda. Though this is an unusual critical
mode, I feel that it will be an invigorating one.
Black South African literature, like the literature of Sub-Saharan
Africa in general, is founded on group experience. The African ideal
of social life, now frequently voiced by Mandela's government, is
that "a person is a person because of other people." Africans
never sought to live by any principle that conflicts with this one,
so that it is stubborn of Americans not to accept the failures of
liberal individualism in Africa. Africans reject or mangle institutions
like independent courts, salaried jobs, the nuclear family, and
achievement-oriented education, because by making the individual
free but responsible these conflict with Africans' deepest values.
(I know I must seem condescending or even disingenuous when I describe
striking differences between Africa and the West. Years ago, I sniffed
at a missionary's account of how extraordinarily prone Africans
are to twisted bowels. Now that I have lived in Africa I believe
him---physically, Africans are really not like us. But I don't expect
my own assertions about African culture to be believed by any Americans
but those who have lived overseas; the undiluted American environment
is too bland to foster any notion of real difference.) A literature
of individual experience does not grow from African values, so that
we Westerners, peering nervously out of our own experience (decades
if not centuries ago, we stopped worrying about the self-abnegating
Proverbs and turned wholly to the self-expressive Psalms), find
it difficult to see any sympathetic values at all in African literature.
Powerful group values are there, but to us these are anti-values.
Zakes Mda (b. 1948; his full name is Zanemvula Kizito Gatyeni Mda,
but nobody uses it) is the leading South African black playwright.
One of his long-standing literary involvements is strikingly African:
"development theatre," or the acting out of useful messages
for the illiterate. Here, group dynamics are key. In Mda's book
When People Play People (1993), there is as much emphasis
on the collective reactions of villagers as on the content of plays
like Migrant Labou" and Vaccination that he and
his university colleagues produced. The audiences were vitally part
of the plays, as is the case whenever development projects use drama.
By now, many non-governmental organizations have found it expedient
to let clients do all of the actual play-acting: Africans are that
devoted to performance. Even if they are not performing in the strict
sense themselves at a given presentation, their attention is intense,
and they create a sort of counter-performance of their own. There
is a clear contrast between an African child or young woman, whose
status at home is low and who does not normally have what we would
call a "voice," in an individual interview and the same
person on or facing a stage. Mda's novel She Plays with the Darkness
(1996) forms a good illustration of the African ideology of
performance: a young Lesotho girl's refusal to dance leads to her
withdrawing into a dark hut for many years and ceasing to age; she
effectively stops living as a human being.
In his published, commercial plays, Mda makes many concessions to
Western expectations of theater---naturally, as Western curricula
have been until very recently the only official ones available in
Africa. Mda's main models are European and American classics. In
the most academic of his plays, however, the author's deep and particularly
African solidarity with the live audience is plain. The characters
speak in such general terms (complaint, resignation, hope) of such
common experiences (poverty, corruption, violence, racial and class
divisions) that they seem to be a cross-section of the public talking.
A veteran miner in The Hill (1980) says,
What is not degrading in this land of gold? The medical examinations
through which you'll go, are they not degrading? When all the
recruits stand naked irrespective of age and relationship, only
to have the heartbeat examined, is that not degrading...? Are
all these things not meant to humiliate us, to make us feel inadequate
as men and fathers of our children, and to deprive us of human
dignity, so that we may dig the gold of the white man with utmost
submission?
There are no quirky characters here, no one with a special fault
or gift, and conflicts come only from people having generally different
experiences and political views. This makes the endings of the plays,
from a Western point of view, especially odd. Personal revelation
is what we expect a main character to undergo: like Oedipus, he
or she should find out, or do, or be subject to, something that
changes everything. In twentieth-century Western theater, the negation
of such a change, as in Death of a Salesman, is as dramatic
as its occurrence: the personal in any case contains most of the
excitement of dramatic story-telling. In African drama like Mda's,
Western influences work eerily with the demands of a culture that
could not care less about the inner and individual lives of the
characters. In And The Girls in Their Sunday Dresses (1988),
which is set in an unnamed post-colonial African country, a prostitute
and an exiled woman anti-apartheid activist become friends while
waiting for several days for a distribution of free rice. In the
end, drawing strength from each other, they refuse the hand-out
from careless and questionably motivated international donors working
through a corrupt and sadistic local bureaucracy. To some degree,
a Western-style coming-of-age theme is visible: the prostitute,
inspired by the activist's idealism and endurance, elects to go
away without the food meant to degrade her and make her dependent;
the activist joyfully joins her in this assertion of dignity. But
their decision is more like a political affiliation than an act
of personal growth. The two women are now made available for building
a new, just society, in defiance of black tyrannies, the white police
state, and the whole manipulative West. Their motivation comes largely
from without; while they acknowledge that they have had far more
than their share of suffering (much of it inflicted by those closest
to them) because they are women, they decline to make an issue of
their gender identity or interests, but merely dedicate themselves
to the larger struggle.
It is now time for us to change things. To liberate not only
ourselves, but the men themselves, for we are all in bondage...!
When mothers whose sons have been ripped to pieces by bullets
are able to say "My son's death is a victory for the people.
His wasn't just mine. He belonged to the people!" Then you
know that victory is indeed certain, and liberation is just around
the corner.
The similarities to Soviet thinking are of course rather overt,
but communists in Africa did not have to foster collectivist sentiment:
there was actually too much of it, even for them. Post-colonial
socialist African states failed not because of people looking after
themselves at the expense of their civic duty, but because of them
devoting their energies to their extended families and tribes. Leftist
African authors like Mda sometimes try to show that traditional
and revolutionary loyalties can be combined. The Joys of War
(1989) is a somewhat Brechtian meditation on war, but the ending
goes far beyond Brecht in prescriptiveness. A hysterical little
girl (in repeated frenzies of mourning for a doll she is convinced
dies again and again) has been dragged across the country by her
grandmother, in a forced search for the father who abandoned her
to join a rebel underground. The girl finds him moments before he
is to blow up an army base---and insists on joining him though warned
of the danger. This ending and that of And the Girls in Their
Sunday Dresses resonate with the African idea of initiation.
In most Sub-Saharan African tribes, a person is held to grow into
maturity in the moment of sacrifice to the group, a sacrifice so
radical as to be symbolized by physical trauma: male circumcision
or female genital mutilation, facial scarring or other painful decoration;
at the least, a fast or a period of exile in the wilderness. Africans
think that it is absurd to honor as mature a person who has defied
the group because of private convictions or ambitions or needs.
It is partly allegiance to a large group that keeps Mda's plays
short, their language and plots simple, and their ideas cut and
dried, so that the stories in themselves do not take over and rampage
through the audience in what Westerners have thought, since Aristotle,
is a highly desirable manner. Interpersonal conflict is haphazard
and unconvincing in Mda, because the characters are not persons
but general types, as in a medieval morality play. They do not usually
have names, but are designated as "Man" or "Young
Man" or the like. Sometimes Mda seems to be keeping a broad,
impersonal message on the stage at any cost to probability. In
The Road (1982), a white farmer struts his brutality ("I
say love your enemy, but shoot him all the same") before a
stranger he at first thinks is a liberal white, but then discovers
to be black; even after this, he confesses the sexual nature of
his hatred and includes an account of bestiality.
As an American reading Mda, I used to think of the skits American
high school students write and perform, so that their parents and
friends can learn in one act that drug abuse is dangerous or that
popularity isn't everything. But in Africa didacticism of this kind
has a far different social resonance, that of modesty and respect,
not of shallowness. Mda is talking to his people (or putatively
to his people; whites have probably outnumbered blacks in his commercial
audiences, merely because of economics) only about their general
experience, and only in general terms, but, unlike Americans, Africans
would not want him to think and speak for himself.
But what does a Western audience make of it all? Probably not a
great deal: some of Mda's plays debuted in America and Europe, but
they apparently did not take hold like Athol Fugard's drama, which
has been causing great excitement since the Seventies---and which
did not come to look narrowly topical after apartheid ended. In
America, I never heard of Mda, and in Africa his politics have a
certain staleness. In South Africa, whites, still the main theater-goers,
tend to treat Mda as a phrase ("the black playwright Zakes
Mda") rather than a cultural resource. He seems also to have
sacrificed some post-apartheid black establishment patronage by
his---in this case, Western-style--- political engagement, particularly
by his outspokenness about the African National Congress government's
tendency to award jobs literally "to the family" and the
consequent emigration of unemployed though highly qualified black
professionals. While there is plenty of Fugard produced every season,
I did not have a chance to see a Mda play during more than three
years in the country.
This I really regret. Mda is superb in ritual---almost literal ritual.
In We Will Sing for the Fatherland (1979), two derelict veterans
of a war of liberation conduct what will turn out to be their own
funeral. At the end, they are grudgingly buried in paupers' graves
by the bribe-taking policeman who helped cause their death by allowing
them to stay overnight in a public park, where they froze. But on
the day before, they mourn themselves in detail, in parallel to
the mendacious ceremonies the government is preparing for foreign
dignitaries, for whose sake the derelicts are supposed to be removed
from the park; and later, their ghosts look on and comment as the
bodies are buried.
Sub-Saharan African funerals are usually events of vast importance,
lasting several days and wiping out bank accounts. Family ghosts,
or "ancestors," are the guiding and judging inhabitants
of the spiritual world; fertility and continuity are their mandate.
The irony in the case of the bereft veterans is skillfully crafted---especially
in their mock-heroic presentation of themselves (still living biologically,
but dead in the ways that count in Africa), which parodies funeral
"praise-singing"; dead warriors are particularly entitled
to praise, particularly from their relatives. In this connection,
the play's title looks brilliantly creepy. The nation-state has
stolen the praise the men earned---but perhaps not?---from society
by helping to create that very nation-state.
*
Njabulo Ndebele is the best-established South African prose fiction
writer; his short stories in the collection Fools (1983)
are required reading in many secondary schools. This is not a strange
fate for the book, as Ndebele's involvement with education has been
long and devoted. His most recent book is Death of a Son (1996),
an adult literacy training text anachronistically about the shooting
of a little boy by apartheid security forces in a black township.
Turning the poor and illiterate into an audience, as Mda has also
done, must be in part a matter of African pragmatism. But, like
Tolstoy with his peasants' schools and his primer, Mda and Ndebele
have an unfakable earnestness. Ndebele's chiefly concerns the young,
and it is in depicting their integration into society that he expresses
the typical African regard for the group. His emphasis on growing
up is in general not about achievement and independence but about
fitting in. In "Uncle," a fatherless boy in a black township
finds advice and inspiration in his jazz musician relative. The
climactic scene is a street fight in which the opinion of the township---especially
of its leading figures---is in the boy's mind at every shift, as
the uncle outwits his rival. There are also monologues from the
uncle about history and politics, manhood and survival. In the end,
the uncle rescues his sister and nephew from a mob, although he
fails to help a young thief who is being kicked and beaten. The
maternal uncle, a traditionally special figure to an African child,
in this depiction totters between the freedoms that success among
whites have conferred on him---he can disappear for days at a time
on mysterious business, and he has money to spend on a prostitute,
whom his nephew encounters by dismaying accident---and the demands
and abuses of a community near collapse. But there is little narrative
movement in the story, probably because the uncle's status and authority
cannot change: they are built in. Westerners (like myself) sometimes
find Ndebele callow, reminding them of teenage-authored fiction
in which a grown-up advisor is the deus ex machina, or in
which the protagonist achieves happiness by doing what is expected.
Again, a completely different view of human development is part
of the reason for the appreciation gap, which there has been no
easy way to mend. Ndebele is all but ignored abroad.
But Ndebele's little boy characters escape from narratives of indoctrination
and create some flawless evocations of childhood. In "Uncle,"
the unnamed nephew walks home after school with his friends, the
value of each of whom is carefully nuanced in his mind according
to private criteria. The boys are playing a hypnotic game of kicking
objects, but the game suddenly tips them into the terrifying if
familiar world of thuggish older boys---their own neighbors and
brothers. In "The Test," Thoba, caught with other boys
in a complicated, unvoiced dare, runs through the neighborhood without
a shirt in the pouring rain, exhilarated at first but finally humiliated
by the matriarchs at the bus stop. The unnamed protagonist in "The
Prophetess" spills the "blessed" water he is fetching
for his ailing mother; after some soul-searching he fills the bottle
at a nearby tap, and is satisfied when the deception works. Fools
is full of children's secrets, small dodges that bring a temporary
privilege into the hardship and upheaval of the townships. It is
almost as if, in his memories of childhood, customarily the time
before initiation when a person is half outside society and not
quite human (full humanity being conferred by incorporation into
the tribe), Ndebele re-lives the freedom of inward revelation, and
in this sense the stories can go somewhere. This is particularly
true of "The Music of the Violin," in which Vukani savors
his apartheid-promoting homework, the neat puzzle of leading questions
that he is good at answering and that give him an excuse to hide
in his room from his bullying, social-climbing parents and their
guests; but he finally gives up the appearance of conformity because
of the sheer pressure placed on him. While the adults are political
stick figures, markers of "the co-option of the black middle
class" and "what allowed apartheid to go on for so long,"
Vukani is real and intriguing. In a book of essays, South African
Literature and Culture: The Rediscovery of the Ordinary (1991),
Ndebele describes the intimate writing possible somewhere beyond
the imperatives of the fight against political oppression. He has
achieved this intimacy in large segments of his own work.
It is chiefly the boys of Fools who inspire affection for
Ndebele among whites, an affection that has great practical importance.
Despite more power for blacks in cultural spheres, it is still mostly
whites who are making the decisions--most crucially about required
school texts. These decisions have a weight almost unimaginable
in the West, where the average pupil owns a number of books and
can visit a library to indulge his curiosity and dilute the school
authorities' tastes. In South Africa and beyond, in spite of more
opportunity for blacks than before, everything comes back to the
judgment of the West, and this situation is not likely to change
until black Africa has independent political and economic power.
Mda and Ndebele have contributed to the first-generation commercial
literature of black Africa, making inescapably large concessions
to Western genre, media and sentiment. This may not be such a calamity:
it is through Western influence that Mda explores political ambivalence
and Ndebele explores inner life. But I do not wish to speak here
except in the most cautious and divided way. What do I want from
African literature? What is it right to want? The long-term, big
question is whether anybody will do it, invent one of those
far-reaching forms that are the means for a marginal culture to
achieve status and influence: forms like jazz, in music. The deficit
in literature is partly due to the problem of language, but only
partly.
The post-apartheid generation of authors might be expected to get
a clearer view of what in Africa has universal appeal. In some ways,
these authors are more cosmopolitan. Their predecessors, Mda and
Ndebele among them, had an international education through exile,
but constantly directed their attention back home to the "struggle,"
so that they were less objective and even had a tendency to emphasize
defiantly what they knew outsiders would not like, such as assertion
over story-telling. Their insistence on their difference would have
been more useful---to themselves and to the next generation---had
they not overlooked those features of African literary culture which
are better on aesthetic grounds than what the West has now, even
according to the West's own standards. Current American and European
literature can be tiresome in its neglect of common sense, common
tastes, and common use. Most of a century ago, Virginia Woolf defended
the rights of the common reader (meaning an old-fashioned seeker
after pleasure and enlightenment in books) both explicitly and---this
is more important---through her style. Now, during the post-modern
era, she must be spinning in her grave. Ordinary Africans---never
separated from their own most vital literary traditions---in their
communication create a sharp contrast to us. At a conference of
rural medical practitioners, a group of nurses gets up on the platform
and dances to a chant composed on the spot: "Girl, if you go
with many men / Be wise, use a condom." African joy in words
has not found a means of wide commercial propagation in today's
circumstances, however, and remains trapped in obscurity. I am sorry
to take up the cliché about the gift of "rhythm,"
but it is a cliché substantiated by the strong custom of
group singing and dancing. (Swaying, flouncing choirs seem to be
the only unkillable institution in all of South African society;
"massed" choir events draw audiences of thousands.) Rhythm
is linked to performance. In putting aside performance, Western
literature has cut off a main food supply. If there is no performance,
sound is unimportant. Poetry and rhetoric fall apart; literature,
if you can call it that, can be presented any old way---as Ndebele
and Mda, unchallenged by present Western standards, present it in
their frequently awkward, unattractive phrasing. As their ancestors
(or ours either) never would have done, they concentrate on what
they say, not on how they say it. They have missed the big party.
It is necessary to be at the same time closer to and farther away
from an indigenous culture than these authors are in order to make
it communicate. But the older generation of black politicians, if
not of writers (Mda and Ndebele are innocent), seems to be keeping
younger black authors from occupying that fertile place, by turning
polarizations into loyalty tests. There is pressure on young writers
to use their home languages---pressure empty of respect for the
fact that a professional writer composing in Sotho, for example,
not only cannot fulfill his ambitions but will not even eat bread.
Most Sotho speakers who can read cannot afford to buy a book. This
is only one blockage---among so many that I could not even find
a successful young black writer whose work I could quote as an example
of rising talent. (There is a great deal of talent around, but it
is all underdeveloped, little-known, frustrated talent.) In general,
blockages take the form of discouragement from reconciliation with
white culture. The elders studied Shakespeare at mission schools
(which apartheid later stamped out) and foreign universities, but
now are insisting that, for blacks, the study of Shakespeare is
oppression.
Sharing and reconciliation are common desires that come up against
the common objection that their fulfillment is not possible when
one side is much more powerful; it is a corollary of this objection
that the imbalance necessarily weights cultural relations, which
are ideally about free communication, down to the level of political
relations dependent on power. But if this is true, there is never
any way out. The artists in the less powerful group can react only
after a revolution, through authoritarian impositions, which do
nothing to the general situation but turn it around. The developing
new South African cultural establishment is not powerful enough
to effect this program, but its attempts to have been as repellent
as such attempts generally are, and as powerfully against the interests
of those who have the gift of expression and want to develop it,
and of those waiting to hear them. I hope that in the long term
interaction gets a chance, with the West on its side having learned
to be more fair.
I'm stupid, aren't I? Africans laugh heartily at the idea of the
West ever being fair, even when the West is trying. But how am I
supposed to conclude this essay?
Well, how would a good Quaker do it? If Quakers were critics, they
would probably show the literary version of an attitude Africans
would recognize from their tribal cultures: that the aim of judgment
should not be reward or punishment, but peace, the reintegration
and growth of the community. The goal of criticism would be, according
to Quakers---and Africans---not to be right, not to put an author
in his place according to his deserts, but to help the community
of readers and writers to thrive. In practice, this would mean not
a rejection of discrimination, but rather the opposite, the development
of a more acute clarity. As a tool in an important process, judgment
tends to get more care and respect than as an end in itself; to
this, Quaker Meetings for Worship with a Concern for Business bear
witness: in disputes, Quakers concentrate on the practical value
of the disputed object to individuals---a topic open to precise
investigation and thus attractive to consensus---and not on such
vague and divisive topics as the ethics and intelligence of opponents.
In talking about literature, Quakers concentrate on whether a particular
work "speaks to their [individual] conditions," and why
or why not, questions that avoid the validating or rejecting pose
of the mainline reader and critic, yet affirm the right to seek
personal meaning and to communicate an experience of that seeking.
Africans will probably never express their strong impulses toward
community-building through the attention to the individual evident
in "Quaker process"; but it would be narrow-minded of
me to believe that Africans will not work out other ways to build
communities, including literary communities, in the modern world.
I come back with confidence to Quaker phrasing: African literature,
in many ways, speaks to my condition. This is the model for criticism
I arrived at after teaching Classics in South Africa---but also
after publishing a number of sarcastic, condescending reviews, which
separated me from my own experience as well as from other people.
Pray for me now.
Works Cited
Mda, Zakes. She Plays with the Darkness. Florida Hills,
South Africa: Vivlia Books, 1995.
---------. And the Girls in their Sunday Dresses. Johannesburg:
Witwatersrand University Press, 1993.
---------. The Plays of Zakes Mda. Johannesburg: Ravan Press,
1990.
---------. When People Play People: Development Communication
Through Theatre. London: Zed Books, 1983.
---------. We Shall Sing for the Fatherland and Other Plays.
Johannesburg: Ravan Press, 1980.
Ndebele, Njabulo. Death of a Son. Cape Town: Johannesburg:
Viva Books, 1996.
---------. South African Literature and Culture: Rediscovery
of the Ordinary. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1994.
---------. Fools and Other Stories. Johannesburg: Ravan
Press, 1983.
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