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Two
sides of one coin
Percy
Zvomuya, Mail & Guardian (SA)
August 01, 2008
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2008-08-07-two-sides-of-one-coin
One of the liveliest
writers' sessions at this year's Cape Town Book Fair featured novelists
Jo-Anne Richards, Zukiswa Wanner and Margie Orford examining the
uneasy relationship they, as popular fiction authors, had with the
literary mainstream.
Chief among their grievances
is the lukewarm critical reception they get from South Africa's
highbrow literary establishment. Richards recalls that when her
debut book, The Innocence of Roast Chicken, came out it didn't get
any serious critical attention. One of the snide, unhelpful remarks
thrown her way was "she doesn't even dress like a writer".
Richards bemoans the critics' obsession with what she calls "worthy",
and, at times, "inaccessible" tomes, adding that if any
novelist writes about people, the bigger issues that concern them
will intuitively come out.
Wanner, author of The
Madams and the just published Behind Every Succesful Man (both Kwela
Books), sees this marginalisation of popular fiction as sexist.
She wonders why her genre of literature is called "Black Chick
Lit" and yet there is no similar designation for popular fiction-
written by male authors. "No one calls Niq Mhlongo's books
Dick Lit," she points out. "I write about what is happening.
It should be entertaining . . . like watching television-."
Reading Wanner's Behind
Every Successful Man is, in many ways, like watching TV: a painless,
easy and a somewhat rewarding exercise. It's about a black economic
empowerment (BEE) man, Andile, a lawyer with traditionalist impulses;
it's also about his wife, Nobantu, a Wits commerce graduate, who
finds the housewife role she plays unfulfilling and stifling. Things
are going well for Andile, with his company Mapamo about to list
on the Johannesburg Securities Exchange. When his wife celebrates
her birthday, appropriately enough she gets a Jaguar as a present.
When guests at the party ask a tipsy Andile what his wife does,
he replies, "our Nobantu here does nothing. She is just a housewife."
It is the moment which
drives Nobantu to leave her family and home in a quest to prove
that she is more than a housewife. It is fast-paced book; I read
its 180-odd pages in a few hours. As you read you get the sense
that you are in a rush and, as a consequence, issues are suggested
and never fully explored. This could hint at the vacuous and vapid
lives the super-rich lead, existences that Wanner is ridiculing.
Oupa, a 50-something partner of Andile's at Mapamo, has an empty-headed,
shopaholic wife barely into her twenties. Andile wonders what they
say to each other when they are alone. "She probably says,
'do you know, the shops are still open right now in Brazil and if
I was there I could be shopping . . . '." And on and on this
silly lovers' talk goes.
Most things in the book
are understated, somewhat robotic, and that includes even the sex.
The pace of the plot is so breathless that we don't quite see how
Andile and Nobantu's sexually explosive relationship slid into indifference
and stultifying convention.
But Wanner is a keen
observer of the rich, their empty lives and how unbalanced and inadequate
they become in situations in which money can't buy acquiescence
and affection. When Andile, while trying to shirk his parental responsibility,
tries to "bribe" Nqobisa, his precocious daughter sees
through this: "Daddy, I am too old for an ice- cream bribe
. . . ".
Wanner paints tenderly
and with deftness and sensitivity the episode in which Nqobisa starts
menstruating. It is one situation in which no bribe can be proffered
and none, in any case, can be taken. Andile's abdication of his
role as a parent is cruelly exposed, for this is a situation in
which one has to give oneself and no amount of BEE money can substitute
for that self.
The book doesn't lack
for serious stuff, as this and other episodes show. It raises these
bigger issues but at times the author chooses to look at them in
a pared-down, almost noncommittal way, something which may drive
away the more serious-minded readers.
The seriously
minded is what Valerie Tagwira's The Uncertainty of Hope (Jacana
and Weaver Press) will get, especially at universities. It is set
against Operation
Murambatsvina, (Drive out Trash), the Zimbabwean state's brutal
onslaught on the poor of the country's slums. In the 2005 operation
the police destroyed the homes and livelihoods of up to a million
people. The main protagonist in The Uncertainty of Hope is Onai
Moyo, a vendor trapped in an abusive marriage. Onai's plight is
made bearable by a rewarding friendship and sisterhood she shares
with Katy, married to a loving truck-driver husband, who, on the
sly, trafficks girls into South Africa.
The world Tagwira draws
is strangely small and interconnected, at times unbelievably so.
It seems every one of the main characters, in different parts of
the city, knows the other. The hospital is a central trope in the
book, bringing together all these disparate people. I wondered if
it was Tagwira's professional bias (she studied obstetrics and gynaecology)
or maybe a metaphor for a diseased country. A sick nation is a good
host for those who happen to be near the increasingly depleting
pot of gold: the primitive accumulators of wealth.
Yet even these see the
emptiness of it all and they yearn for their younger, idealistic
selves, forever gone. But there are those who long for -- and are
willing to relive -- this idyll, such as the "madman"
Mawaya who, after the death of his wife, abandons his businesses
and privileged lifestyle and engages in strange rituals of poverty
and penance.
The book is, for several
reasons, a sociological document which at times is heavy going and
recalls what was said about Malian Yambo Ouologuem's Bound to Violence.
Critics were not sure whether Ouologuem would turn out to be a "better
sociologist and historian than novelist". This description
is not necessarily censure, for don't we still go back to Dambudzo
Marechera's House of Hunger and Charles Mungoshi's Waiting for the
Rain to look at the psyche of the black in the Rhodesia of the 1970s?
Tagwira's book is a celebration
of urban sisterhood and abiding relationships that withstand the
deprivations of harsh, life-negating policies. It is also a record,
sometimes with suffocating helpings of activism, of the struggle
for the emancipation of women, a struggle which not even the end
of the novel begins to deals with. For near the end of the book
Onai's daughter says she wants to be a journalist, an unpopular
choice in her household. "Why don't you think about nursing?"
someone says, helpfully suggesting a safe, traditional female role.
The first 300 or so pages
move at a slow, meditative pace -- something the last 60 pages seem
to want to rectify. It's almost as though Tagwira, realising how
action-starved her readers are, decides to unleash all the drama
in one helping. There is an arrest, an eviction, a flight, a death
and more -- even in the lethargic- urban mass one begins to see
the stirrings of a people who want to struggle.
The Uncertainty of Hope
and Behind Every Successful Man are two sides of one coin. The kind
of readers who would enjoy one certainly won't readily take to the
other. But both novels are, in their ways, delicate and at times
moving portrayals of women trying to defeat the obstacles -- in
private and public spaces -- placed in their way by sexism and ancient
traditions. One wishes, though, that these two would compare notes:
Tagwira doesn't have that chirpy lightheartedness that so typifies
Wanner, and Wanner could do with a whiff of the seriousness that
drips from Tagwira's book.
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