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Nkosi, Lewis 1936

Contemporary Black Biography | 2005 | | Copyright 2005 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Lewis Nkosi 1936

Writer

Embraced Socially-Conscious Journalism

Hailed as Important Black Dramatist

Earned International Acclaim for Mating Birds

Selected works

Sources

Described in South Africa Sunday Times as a sharp and gifted writer with an irreverent take on life, Lewis Nkosi has lived in exile since 1960. He held several jobs in print and broadcast journalism before beginning an academic career that brought him to campuses in Europe, the United States, and Zambia. In his plays, fiction, and essays, Nkosi confronts issues relating to apartheid and its aftermath in contemporary South Africa.

Embraced Socially-Conscious Journalism

Nkosi was born on December 5, 1936, in Natal, South Africa, and attended a boarding school run by religious missionaries in Zululand, a region of Natal province that is the ancestral home of the Zulu people. He then enrolled in the M. L. Sultan Technical College in Durban. Nkosis first job as a journalist was with a Zulu newspaper, Ilanga lase Natal. In 1956 he joined the staff of Drum magazine, an influential publication by and for Africans that attempted to raise anti-apartheid consciousness. As he explained to Kerri Berney in the Brandeis University newspaper The Justice, We would send reporters [in disguise] to jail or to white farms and have them write about how the prisoners were treated.

By 1959 Nkosis work was sufficiently well-known that the young reporter was invited to apply for a Neiman Fellowship for study at Harvard University. He was accepted, but the South African government refused to give him a passport. I figured I would just stay in South Africa, he explained in The Justice, but a lawyer friend of mine got very angry about my treatment. Hefound a very obscure law that let me out of South Africa. But once Nkosi left the country, he would lose his citizenship and not be allowed to return.

After completing his studies at Harvard, Nkosi flew to London, where he obtained work with the BBC. He produced the radio series Africa Abroad from 1962 to 1965, and interviewed major African writers for the television program African Writers of Today, a series for National Education Television. In London, Nkosi also served as editor of New African magazine from 1965 to 1968. Commenting later on his decision to live in exile, Nkosi told the South Africa Sunday Times that I couldnt care about the prospect of not returning. My sense of what was wrong in South Africa at the time remained. But leaving helped me come to terms with the fact that we did not own injustice. I began to see the larger world from a perspective not limited to race, he added. To be frank, I was relieved to be rid of the constraints placed on me.

Hailed as Important Black Dramatist

In 1963, Nkosis stage play The Rhythm of Violence was produced in London. When it was published the following year, the play received significant praise. Depicting the plight of characters who are caught up in a spiral of mindless violence, the play shows that

At a Glance

Born on December 5, 1936, in Durban, South Africa; married Bronwyn Ollerenshaw, 1965; children: Louise, Joy (twins). Education : Sultan Technical College, Durban, 1954-55; Harvard University, Nieman Fellow, 1961-62; University of London, BA English literature, 1974; University of Sussex, MA, 1977.

Career: llanga Lase Natal (Zulu newspaper), Durban, South Africa, staff member, 1955-56; Golden City Post, Johannesburg, South Africa, journalist, 1956-60; Drum magazine, Johannesburg, South Africa, journalist, 1956-60 South African Information Bulletin, Paris, France, writer, 1962-6B; BBC Transcription Center, London, England, radio producer, 1962-64; The New African, literary editor, 1965-68; University of California-Irvine, visiting Regents professor, 1970; University of Wyoming, professor of English, 1991-99. University of Zambia, University of Warsaw, and Brandeis University, visiting teaching positions

Awards: Dakar Festival prize, 1965; C. Day Lewis fellowship, 1977; Macmillan Silver Pen award, 1987.

Addresses: Home Switzerland; Agent Deborah Rogers, Rogers, Coleridge, and White Ltd., 20 Powis Mews, London W11 1JN, England.

understanding between human beings is an attainable goal, but that the rhythm of self-perpetuating violence prevents it. According to a contributor to Contemporary Dramatists, The Rhythm of Violence is an outstanding first play and an important one, and caused critics to place Nkosi among the vanguard of the new black South African theater.

Nkosi also wrote radio plays during this period, including The Trial and We Cant All Be Martin Luther King. His television play, Malcolm, aired in Sweden and in Britain. In addition to dramatic works, Nkosi also began writing literary criticism.

Nkoksis most famous work for the stage is The Black Psychiatrist, a one-act play that toured several African countries and also was produced at the Centre Pompidou in Paris, France. In this work, a white woman visits the consulting room of a black male psychiatrist in England. In an openly seductive manner, the woman implies that she knows him from long ago, when they were lovers in South Africa. The psychiatrist vehemently denies this, but as the play proceeds, it becomes clear that the woman does have intimate information about the doctors pastenough to worry him. Though he tries to fend off the womans sexual advances, the psychiatrist finally embraces her, but then reveals his own secret: that her father had raped his mother, a black servant on the white estate, and that he is the womans half-brother.

Earned International Acclaim for Mating Birds

The subject of rape is also central to Nkosis celebrated first novel, Mating Birds. Sibya, a young man who has just moved to the city from his native Zulu village, sees an attractive white woman on the segregated beach and begins a silent flirtation with her across the fence that separates white and colored areas. He begins following the woman everywhere, and eventually goes to her bungalow. Seeing him watching her, she undresses in front of him and lies down on the bed. He enters her room and they have sex, but almost immediately he is arrested and charged with rape. Sibya narrates his story from his prison cell, where he awaits the death sentence for this rape. The novel attracted considerable attention. Some critics were disturbed by its suggestion that the woman was asking for it, but others hailed it as a powerful indictment of apartheid. Nation critic George Packer wrote that the novel attempts nothing less than an allegory of colonialism and apartheid, one that dares to linger in complexity. The novel won the Macmillan Silver Pen award in 1987 and has been translated into several languages.

Despite using the subject of interracial sex so prominently in his own work, Nkosi has been highly critical of the stereotypical treatment that many other black South African writers have given this theme. He makes this point clearly in his essay Fiction by Black South Africans, which criticizes writers who rely on readymade plots of racial violence, social apartheid, [and] interracial love affairs. Yet these elements are found in Nkosis work, too; critics, however, have admired the fresh and often ironic approach that he brings to this material. His novel Underground People, for example, deals with apartheid-era resistance during South Africas State of Emergency, which was declared in 1985 and gave the government wideranging emergency powers, including the power to imprison people without charge. Despite the gravity of this subject, Nkosis novel focuses comic characters and situations. Cornelius (Corny) Molapo is a dabbler in poetry and politics whose disappearance from Johannesburg is staged by the resistance movement so that he can travel to the countryside to organize an uprising there. Thinking that Corny has actually been detained by the government, a naive human rights worker from London comes to find him. South Africa Sunday Times contributor Andries Oliphant described the Underground People as a mélange of irony, satire and ribald humour that communicates a droll attitude to history. Nkosis use of a laughable character instead of a heroic one, in Oliphants words, boldly enacts the license of fiction and breaks with the dull dirges on the historical crisis in South Africa.

A prominent literary critic, Nkosi has written frequently for New York Review of Books and London Review of Books and has published several volumes of essays. He often criticizes contemporary South African fiction, as he does in the anthology Writing South Africa: Literature, Apartheid, and Democracy, 1970-1995, for its formal insufficiencies, its disappointing breadline asceticism and prim disapproval of irony, and its well-known predilection for what Lukacs called petty realism, the trivially detailed painting of local colour. This condition, Nkosi adds, is rooted in South Africas colonial legacy and, it is hoped, a post-apartheid condition will set it free. Nkosi has taught at several universities, including the University of California-lrvine, Brandéis University, and the University of Zambia. Retired from the University of Wyoming, where he was a tenured professor, he now lives in Switzerland.

Selected works

Novels

Mating Birds, East African Publishing House, 1983; St. Martins Press, 1986.

The Hold-Up, Wordsmiths Zambia Ltd., 1989.

Underground People, Kwela Books, 2003.

Plays

Come Back Africa (screenplay), 1959.

Rhythm of Violence, 1963.

The Trial (radio play), 1969.

The Chameleon and the Lizard (libretto), 1971.

We Cant All Be Martin Luther King (radio play), 1971.

Malcolm (television play), 1972.

The Black Psychiatrist, c. 1994.

Other

Home and Exile (essays), Longman, 1965; revised edition, 1983.

The Transplanted Heart: Essays on South Africa, [Benin City, Nigeria], 1975.

Tasks and Masks: Themes and Styles of African Literature, Longman, 1981.

(Contributor) Writing South Africa: Literature, Apartheid, and Democracy, 1970-1995, Derek Attridge and Rosemary Jolly, eds., Cambridge University Press, 1998.

Sources

Books

Contemporary Authors, Gale Research, 2001.

Contemporary Dramatists, 6th ed., St. James Press, 1999.

Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2nd ed., Gale Research, 1998.

Periodicals

Justice, November 1, 1995.

Nation, November 22, 1986.

New York Times, May 18, 1986.

New York Times Book Review, May 18, 1986.

Sunday Times (South Africa), November 24, 2002.

On-line

Arts/Culture Review: Underground People, Mmegi, www.mmegi.bw (June 29, 2004).

E. Shostak

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