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Current Literary Affairs: Ronelda S. Kamfer & Margriet van der Waal

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Contenido proporcionado por SLAAcast. Todo el contenido del podcast, incluidos episodios, gráficos y descripciones de podcast, lo carga y proporciona directamente SLAAcast o su socio de plataforma de podcast. Si cree que alguien está utilizando su trabajo protegido por derechos de autor sin su permiso, puede seguir el proceso descrito aquí https://es.player.fm/legal.
In the eighth episode of Current Literary Affairs, Lisanne Snelders speaks with South African writer Ronelda S. Kamfer and professor of South African literature Margriet van der Waal. They discuss their relationship with the language Afrikaans given its complex historical perspective and Afrikaans' position in South Africa's literary landscape. Lisanne also talks with Ronelda about her poetry collection Chinatown and her recently published novel Compound, exploring themes like feminism and the complexity of patriarchal structures in her work. Ronelda S. Kamfer (Cape Town, 1981) is one of South Africa's foremost authors. She writes in Cape Afrikaans, a dialect blending English and street slang. Her debut poetry collection "Noudat Slapende Honde" (Now That Sleeping Dogs, 2008) paints a vivid picture of life in poverty. "Santenkraam" (2012) features verse stories about a fishing village displaced by a military base. "Mammie" (2017) is a raw yet affectionate tribute to her mother. "Chinatown" (2021) hits hard, with Kamfer skillfully blending intimacy and dark humor to tackle themes of violence, women's roles, love, and parenthood. She translates Kirsty Applebaum's Princess Minna children's books into Afrikaans, including "Die eenhoring-gedoente" and "Die betowerde woud" (2023), and curates "Die maan is zwart" (2022), a poetry anthology by Adam Small. Her debut novel "Kompoun" (2021) was translated into Dutch by Alfred Schaffer, who also translated her poetry. Margriet van der Waal (born in Pretoria, South Africa) is a cultural scholar at the University of Groningen, where she is also Director of Studies of the Erasmus Mundus Master program Euroculture. Additionally, she holds the endowed chair in South African Literature, Culture and History at the University of Amsterdam as an endowed professor because of the Stichting Zuid-Afrikahuis Nederland. For her research, Van der Waal analyses European and South African cultural (colonial and postcolonial) imaginaries and how these imaginaries form part of the public sphere. Current Literary Affairs is a podcast about current events through the lens of literature, in which we engage in conversation with writers from all over the world. How do the political circumstances in their country of residence influence their life and work? What are the topics we really should be talking about? CLA brings urgent conversation about fear and hope, outrage and pride, the personal and the political. Current Literary Affairs is a podcast by SLAA and Read My World. This podcast was realized thanks to Cultuurfonds and Productiehuis Noord, the media channel of ‘Verdedig Noord’.
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103 episodios

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Manage episode 419425682 series 2152047
Contenido proporcionado por SLAAcast. Todo el contenido del podcast, incluidos episodios, gráficos y descripciones de podcast, lo carga y proporciona directamente SLAAcast o su socio de plataforma de podcast. Si cree que alguien está utilizando su trabajo protegido por derechos de autor sin su permiso, puede seguir el proceso descrito aquí https://es.player.fm/legal.
In the eighth episode of Current Literary Affairs, Lisanne Snelders speaks with South African writer Ronelda S. Kamfer and professor of South African literature Margriet van der Waal. They discuss their relationship with the language Afrikaans given its complex historical perspective and Afrikaans' position in South Africa's literary landscape. Lisanne also talks with Ronelda about her poetry collection Chinatown and her recently published novel Compound, exploring themes like feminism and the complexity of patriarchal structures in her work. Ronelda S. Kamfer (Cape Town, 1981) is one of South Africa's foremost authors. She writes in Cape Afrikaans, a dialect blending English and street slang. Her debut poetry collection "Noudat Slapende Honde" (Now That Sleeping Dogs, 2008) paints a vivid picture of life in poverty. "Santenkraam" (2012) features verse stories about a fishing village displaced by a military base. "Mammie" (2017) is a raw yet affectionate tribute to her mother. "Chinatown" (2021) hits hard, with Kamfer skillfully blending intimacy and dark humor to tackle themes of violence, women's roles, love, and parenthood. She translates Kirsty Applebaum's Princess Minna children's books into Afrikaans, including "Die eenhoring-gedoente" and "Die betowerde woud" (2023), and curates "Die maan is zwart" (2022), a poetry anthology by Adam Small. Her debut novel "Kompoun" (2021) was translated into Dutch by Alfred Schaffer, who also translated her poetry. Margriet van der Waal (born in Pretoria, South Africa) is a cultural scholar at the University of Groningen, where she is also Director of Studies of the Erasmus Mundus Master program Euroculture. Additionally, she holds the endowed chair in South African Literature, Culture and History at the University of Amsterdam as an endowed professor because of the Stichting Zuid-Afrikahuis Nederland. For her research, Van der Waal analyses European and South African cultural (colonial and postcolonial) imaginaries and how these imaginaries form part of the public sphere. Current Literary Affairs is a podcast about current events through the lens of literature, in which we engage in conversation with writers from all over the world. How do the political circumstances in their country of residence influence their life and work? What are the topics we really should be talking about? CLA brings urgent conversation about fear and hope, outrage and pride, the personal and the political. Current Literary Affairs is a podcast by SLAA and Read My World. This podcast was realized thanks to Cultuurfonds and Productiehuis Noord, the media channel of ‘Verdedig Noord’.
  continue reading

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