Reading (for) Lockdown: Two Afrofuturist Texts from South Africa (original) (raw)

Writing a South African Pandemic Moment: Inequality and Violence in The Lockdown Collection

16 March , 2022

This article examines how the overwhelmingly dominant genre in The Lockdown Collection (2020), the personal essay, is an appropriate medium to capture the immediacy of the initial hard lockdown in South Africa because of its brevity and resonance. While the essays react to policies of virus containment, the loss and alteration of social conventions, they inevitably reveal the identity of each author and how that identity sits in the imagination of South Africanness. This appellation itself incorporates and complicates fraternities that are race and class based in a context of acute inequality and ubiquitous violence. The essays display an awareness of the strong relationship between these two aspects and writing about them appears as an antidote to fear and a desire for a better South Africa, as learnt from and suggested by the challenges of Covid-19. meegebring het suggereer en ons inderdaad geleer het.

Anchoring our days through the senses during South Africa's lockdown

Corona Times, 2020

In the following blog post for the blog 'Corona Times', I engage the consequences of lockdown in South Africa by situating myself in the present through my senses. The post is essentially a sensory experience that highlights the power of sensuous scholarship.

The World Poetics of Lockdown in Pandemic Poetry

Journal of World Literature, 2022

This essay uses contemporary theories on World Literature to discuss two anthologies of pandemic poetry: Singing in the Dark: A Global Anthology of Poetry Under Lockdown, and And We Came Outside and Saw the Stars Again: Writers from Around the World on the Covid-19 Pandemic. These anthologies develop a new criticality on issues of migration, biopower, and inequality that have long "plagued" cultures of late capitalism. As they represent various states of lockdown imposed around the world due to the spread of the coronavirus, the anthologies grapple with the paradoxical experience of the "singularuniversal" that comes with living in a pandemic. By emphasizing the untranslatability of diverse bodies, races, cultures, and languages, these anthologies deconstruct the perceived synchrony of experiencing lockdown. This essay reveals how they attempt to deconstruct the Eurocentrism of "World Literature" by reconfiguring the category of the "global" and representing collective trauma.

Life Writing During a Pandemic: Making Sense of the "New Normal" in Lockdown Extended: Corona Chronicles (2020

Journal of Literary Studies, 2022

This article focuses on the bourgeoning Covid-19 life narratives written by South African authors, who narrate their ordeals and the "new normal" in a bid to make sense of the impact of the pandemic through the lens of their everyday experiences that are different to those mediatised in mainstream media. Through a close reading and textual analysis of three personal narratives, we discuss how they reconstruct the first lockdown in South Africa, and take stock of the situation by confronting an immediate and distant past, daily acts of survival, private lives and imagined futures. The article also considers how the narrators envision themselves as vulnerable subjects, hence uniquely capturing the intense mood of the lockdown and how it led to a renewed interest in life writing.

Performance and Politics in a Time of Confinement: Virtual Stages between South Africa and African America critical-stages.org/23/performance-and-politics-in-a-time-of-confinement-virtual-stages-between-south-africa-andafrican-america

Critical Stages, 2021

This essay spotlights performances, social and artistic, in 2020 that touch points on the circum-Atlantic routes that have linked Africa, African-America and Europe for centuries and which speak to the long history as well as to present expressions of sorrow and revolt in the crisis and confinement of the COVID-19 pandemic. I use the intimate reception of performance in confinement and at times and locations at odds with the performance to reflect on performance and time and performance in times, especially the asynchronous experience of watching shows recorded months or years earlier in distant places. I focus on the rearrangement of Reuben Caluza's dirge Influenzacomposed in response to the 1918 pandemic by Philip Miller with video by Marco Martins, which captures people in confinement and during the COVID-19 lockdown in 2020, and on Neo Muyanga's A Maze in Grace which uses music, dance to explore the links among Liverpool, which housed slaver later preacher John Newton who wrote the hymn Amazing Grace, former slave coasts of West Africa and Muyanga's South Africa, with the site of the premiere in former slave port São Paolo. These pieces, especially Amazing Grace, prompt reflection on contagion, mourning and 2/12 acknowledgment along the circum-Atlantic from Charleston to Chicago.