Great African Reads discussion

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The Heart of Redness
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Mda: Heart of Redness | (CL) first read: Mar 2013
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No problem! i think i'm definitely going to be doing some side research with this selection. i'm excited to get started! :)

1. Noel Mostert's Frontiers: (but be warned: 1355 pages.) Check the Amazon reviews as well as those on GoodReads.
2. Dorothy Winifred Steele's MA thesis: INTERPRETING REDNESS: A LITERARY BIOGRAPHY OF ZAKES MDA
http://uir.unisa.ac.za/bitstream/hand...
3. I would have liked to have added John Matshikiza's play Prophets in the Black Sky which I saw, in the playwright's own production at the Market Theatre in Johannesburg in 1993 but it is, sadly, severely out of print. With luck, though, you might find a copy in a good library. And, unlike the first two works, just 35 pages.




Anybody got a link to an ebook version?? (not amazon, don't know how to convert kindle ones, got a Sony eReader)

I just started today and first I was not sure I was going to be able to get into it, but that feeling is going away very quickly.

I just started today and first I was not sure I was going to be able to get into it, but that feeling is going away very quickly."
Yeah, totally sucks... :(



It will be great to have you on board for Heart of Redness. :)



yay!
i had to set it aside for a couple of days because i have an e-book of Yes, Chef: A Memoir due today, which is great btw. but shortly i'll be returning to this and related readings. :)

i'm so glad...i don't mind the time jumping, but initially i was worried i wouldn't like the "Believers" and "Unbelievers" thing...but those are the actual terms for the two groups of people and i've totally adjusted to it now.

Here are my thoughts on The Heart of Redness:
• First I needed to remind myself that this novel was published in 2002 and at that time this was a very forwarding novel and a way to present the political/cultural issues South Africa at the time the book was published
• Understand some of the historical background helps with the understanding of the book and the issues presented
• In some ways the book is very universal in its themes and presentation – especially for cultures/countries that were colonized and the native cultures were suppressed or not consulted with. And of course there is the age old question on what is progress and how the different definitions applies to different groups
• I would agree that the recurring flashbacks on the historical information at times got redundant and slowed down the plot.
• I would say while the author tried to present both sides of the issue I would say that he does take a stand and the reader will know which way he leans
• Did a good job of showing that most the issues even when you pick sides are not black and white but a lot of gray.
• It also showed that there was much manipulations going on both sides by those who wanted a certain outcome and the loser in both cases would be the common people
• I learned the history and culture of region I did not know much about except how it was presented in the US media
• The themes and issues were also pertinent to me as the US as been in a stalemate on a number of issues over the last couple of years and neither side does not want to give

this episode in South African/Xhosa history reminds me a little bit of the Ghost Dance Movement.

http://opencontent.uct.ac.za/Centre-f...

http://opencontent.uct.ac.za/Centre-f...
Great fun. I was there.

http://opencontent.uct.ac.za/Centre-f...
Great fun. I was there.

For those of you who don't know about Mapungubwe, here's a Wikipedia link
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_...
Descendants from Mapungubwe would eventually end up building the Great Ruins of Zimbabwe. There is very little written about that era in Africa, although these people were producing incredibly beautiful gold jewellery. I'm definitely rushing out to buy this book.

MAPUNGUBWE: ORIGINS AND FUTURE STATUS
Dr Shadreck Chirikure, Department of Archaeology, University of Cape Town
Since its discovery in 1933, Mapungubwe has fired the imagination of academics and members of the South African public alike. One of the golden objects – the Mapungubwe golden rhino – is a famous South African icon. The discovery flowed from the large finds of gold that were recovered from the burials excavated on the hilltop.Evidence shows that the success of the people of Mapungubwe was achieved against a backdrop of an environment seemingly marginal for human occupation.
However, Mapungubwe even had connections with China, India and the Persian Gulf. This two-lecture course will explore the reasons for Mapungubwe’s rise. What was life like during the height of its power? Why did it collapse? What is the value of Mapungubwe today? The first lecture will focus on both the origins and the decline of Mapungubwe.
It will also discuss the major archaeological finds from the site and how these have been interpreted.The second lecture will consider the
place of Mapungubwe in modern South African society, and engage with issues related to the long term conservation of the site, including threats
emanating from increasing mining in the area .
LECTURE TITLES
1 . Unpacking Mapungubwe
2 . Mapungubwe in contemporary society

My apologies for self-promotion.
At http://www.amazon.com/African-Histori...
you’ll find Arthur Anyaduba’s 160-page paperback “African Historical Novel: A Poetics: The Examples of Manu Herbstein's 'AMA' and Zakes Mda's 'The Heart of Redness' ”
That will set you back just $64.80. Librarians?

My apologies for self-promotion.
At http://www.amazon.com/African-Histori...
you’ll find Arthur Anyaduba’s 160-page paperback “African Historical Novel: A Poetics: The Examples of Manu Herbstein's 'AMA' and Zakes Mda's 'The Heart of Redness' ”
That will set you back just $64.80. Librarians?


Books mentioned in this topic
The Sculptors of Mapungubwe (other topics)Yes, Chef (other topics)
Sometimes there is a Void – Memoirs of an Outsider (other topics)
Frontiers: The Epic of South Africa's Creation and the Tragedy of the Xhosa People (other topics)
The Heart of Redness (other topics)
More...
In 2011 Mda published a memoir, Sometimes there is a Void – Memoirs of an Outsider, which the New York Times reviewed in January. In it, the reviewer referred to The Heart of Redness as one of his best novels.
As for Mda himself, in another January review of his memoir, the reviewer notes that, "While many South African writers seemed to lose their footing after apartheid’s official demise, unable to adjust creatively to the collapse of old certitudes, Mda has flourished, discovering fresh stories." The Heart of Redness is one of those fresh stories.
His wikipedia entry provides this synopsis of The Heart of Redness: "The Heart of Redness, Mda's third novel, is inspired by the history of Nongqawuse, a Xhosa prophetess whose prophecies catalyzed the Cattle Killing of 1856-1857. Xhosa culture split between Believers and Unbelievers, adding to existing social strain, famine and social breakdown. It is believed that 20,000 people died of starvation during that time. In the novel, Mda continually shifts back and forth between the present day and the time of Nongqawuse to show the complex interplay between history and myth. He dramatizes the uncertain future of a culture whose troubled relationship with the colonizing force of Empire, as well as their own civil factions, threatens to extinguish their home of Qolorha-by-Sea. Mda's account of the Cattle Killing draws heavily on that of historian Jeff Peires in his book The Dead Will Arise (Mda acknowledges this at the outset of his novel). Like Peires, Mda identifies Mhlkaza, Nongqawuse's uncle and one of the key players in the event, with William Goliath, the first Xhosa person baptised in the Anglican church."
I don't know about you guys, but i feel like i'm treading into brand new territory with this book. To help me (and us) i'm planning to read an essay about The Heart of Redness in South African Literature after the Truth Commission: Mapping Loss. I may also peek at the Peires book.
Happy Reading!