Literatures in European and European-derived languages

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Afrikaans

Afrikaans literature in South Africa can be viewed in the context of Dutch literary tradition or South African literary tradition. Within an African context, Afrikaans literature will be forever on the outside. As is the case with the language, it is caught in an identity crisis that was created irrevocably by the fiercely defended political and cultural identity of the Dutch settlers who arrived in South Africa in 1652 and whose descendants, together with English-speaking whites, took over the government in 1948, after which the notorious system of apartheid was enshrined in laws that would be demolished only in the early 1990s. The conservative branch of the Afrikaner people, always the most numerous and the most powerful, was in conflict throughout the 20th century with a talented and growing group of young poets and novelists, such as C. Louis Leipoldt and Breyten Breytenbach, who sought to broaden the confines of an increasingly limited people and literature. The history of Afrikaans literature is the history of the Afrikaners, an alien people whose literature is a testimony to that state of alienation.

Afrikaans, with its roots in Dutch, has been spoken in South Africa mainly by whites since the 18th century. The First Afrikaans Language Movement began in 1875, led by Stephanus Jacobus du Toit and others; it represented an effort to make Afrikaans a language separate from Dutch. The first newspaper in Afrikaans, Die Patriot (“The Patriot”), began publication in 1876. The linguistic shift from Dutch to Afrikaans did not occur without considerable dispute among the whites of Dutch descent. It was after the South African War (1899–1902)—which became a prominent subject of early Afrikaans literature—that Afrikaans became a significant written language. “Winternag” (1905; “Winter’s Night”), a poem by Eugène Marais, and “Die vlakte” (1906; “The Plain”), a poem by Jan Celliers, dramatically ushered in this new literary language, along with language organizations such as the Suid-Afrikaanse Akademie (founded 1909). Die brandwag (“The Outpost”), a magazine, had a literary section from 1910. The Hertzog Prize for poetry, prose, and drama in Afrikaans was established in 1914. Publishing houses specializing in Afrikaans publications began in 1914 and 1915. In 1914 Cornelius Jakob Langenhoven fostered Afrikaans in schools, and the language was soon after studied at universities and used as a medium of instruction. Parliament recognized Afrikaans as an official language in 1925, six years after it was named the language of the Dutch Reformed Church. Earlier 19th-century writing had been heavily didactic; by the 1920s this had begun to change.

Poets became the most potent harbingers of the new language as the Second Afrikaans Language Movement began; they included Leipoldt, Marais, Celliers, Jakob Daniel du Toit (Totius), Daniel François Malherbe, and Toon van den Heever. Leipoldt, who would one day be condemned as a traitor to Afrikaners, was probably one of the greatest and most original poets of the early 20th century, while Marais in his poetry linked European tradition to the realities of life in South Africa. Prose also appeared during this period, moving away from such melodramatic works as Johannes van Wyk (1906), a novel by J.H.H. de Waal, to more rigorously realistic historical works, such as those by Gustav Preller. Realism began to dominate Afrikaans prose, especially in the work of Jochem van Bruggen, who wrote a trilogy, the first part of which was Ampie, die natuurkind (1931; “Ampie, the Child of Nature”), a study of a poor white in South Africa. A.A. Pienaar (pseudonym Sangiro) wrote popular books about animals. Drama also began to flourish through the writings of Leipoldt, Langenhoven, and H.A. Fagan. Langenhoven was also a popular poet, as was A.G. Visser.

Dramatic events in the 1930s—including a drought that caused many farmers to move to the cities, significant political changes, a sharpening of racial conflict, and the deepening of the Afrikaans-English conflict—isolated Afrikaners more dramatically in South Africa, and fiercely partisan organizations such as the Afrikaner-Broederbond and Federasie van Afrikaanse Kultuurvereniginge gained new adherents. The Afrikaner poets known as the Dertigers (“Thirtyers,” or writers of the 1930s) infuriated conservative Afrikaners with a new type of poetry. The poetry of W.E.G. Louw, N.P. van Wyk Louw, and Elisabeth Eybers was at the heart of this fertile activity, which centred on experimentation with form. Van Wyk Louw’s Raka (1941) is a rhymed study of evil, with Raka as the incarnation of this evil taking over a community. Uys Krige wrote romantic poetry but is known for his war poetry and as a dramatist. There was prose written during this period by Abraham H. Jonker, C.M. van den Heever, and Johannes van Melle, whose Bart Nel (1936), dealing with the Afrikaner rebellion of 1914–15, is considered by some to be the finest novel in Afrikaans.

After World War II, literary magazines carried Afrikaans works. D.J. Opperman continued the experimentation with the Afrikaans language in his poetry, and he introduced decisively South African racial themes into his work. In 1954 Arthur Fula became one of the first black Africans to write a novel in Afrikaans. Audrey Blignault and Elise Muller wrote short stories and essays. Anna M. Louw wrote novels.

The Sestigers (“Sixtyers,” or writers of the 1960s) attempted to do for prose what the Dertigers had done for poetry. Jan Rabie, Etienne Leroux, Dolf van Niekerk, André P. Brink, Abraham de Vries, and Chris Barnard experimented with the novel and moved into areas largely forbidden until that time, such as sex and atheism. Brink’s Lobola vir die lewe (1962; “Pledge for Life”) and Orgie (1965; “Orgy”) caused sensations. Bartho Smit wrote Moeder Hanna (1959; “Mother Hanna”), an acclaimed drama about the South African War. He also wrote Putsonderwater (1962; “Well-Without-Water”), considered among the finest plays produced in Afrikaans; it could not be performed because of its political message. Elsa Joubert wrote a novel about a black woman, Die swerfjare van Poppie Nongena (1978; The Long Journey of Poppie Nongena, or Poppie). Karel Schoeman’s ’n Ander land (1984; “Another Country”) moved into the sensitive political and social realities of South Africa. Adam Small wrote works, such as Kanna hy kô hystoe (1965; Kanna—He Is Coming Home), that revealed the realities of the lives of nonwhites in South Africa. Ingrid Jonker wrote intensely personal poetry. Breytenbach wrote surreal poetry, his work revealing his struggle with the Afrikaners’ political situation in South Africa. His Katastrofes (1964; Catastrophes) is a series of sketches that take racism, death, and madness as their subjects.

These themes persisted through the end of the 20th century. Riana Scheepers, in Die ding in die vuur (1990; “The Thing in the Fire”), a collection of short stories, blended Zulu oral tradition with the world of apartheid. Marlene van Niekerk wrote Triomf (1994; “Triumph”; Eng. trans. Triomf), a novel based on Sophiatown, a black settlement near Johannesburg that was replaced by the South African government in the 1950s and ’60s by a white working-class suburb dubbed Triomf. In Lettie Viljoen’s Klaaglied vir Koos (1984; “Lament for Koos”), a husband leaves his family to join the fight against apartheid. In his novels Toorberg (1986; Ancestral Voices) and Kikoejoe (1996; Kikuyu), Etienne van Heerden dealt with 20th-century South African history. (See also treatment of literature in Afrikaans in South African literature.)