from PART VI - SOUTH AFRICAN LITERATURE: CONTINUITIES AND CONTRASTS
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 January 2012
Women's writing spans the periods, concerns, genres, languages and media addressed in this collection. The purpose of this chapter is not so much to provide a detailed overview of women's writing in South Africa – an impossible task within the space constraints – as to sketch out landmark publications, attending to the emergence of the female autograph and the ways in which women write women within and/or against feminist and national discourses, while exploring the following questions: Through what devices, tropes and reconstructed genealogies have women writers laid claim to artistry, authorship and textual authority? How do they represent the category of ‘women’ and inscribe national identity within a fractured, divided and heterogeneous polity? What representational strategies do they develop to unpick the ‘patchwork quilt of patriarchies’ (Bozzoli, ‘Marxism’, pp. 149, 155) in South Africa?
The female autograph and the nation: Schreiner and Mgqwetho
Situated on opposite sides of the colonial divide, taking up different generic approaches and grappling with divergent concerns, Olive Schreiner (1855–1920) and Nontsizi Mgqwetho (published during the 1920s; date of birth and death unknown) enter into print culture an emergent national and feminist consciousness, while negotiating female authorship. The fate of their respective oeuvres is indicative of the differential challenges women have faced in coming into and remaining in print in South Africa. Schreiner's first novel, The Story of an African Farm (1883), was an immediate success and has achieved canonical status, yet it was first published under a male pseudonym (Ralph Iron).
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