PARADIGMS LOST - PARADIGMS REGAINED - WORKING-CLASS AUTOBIOGRAPHY IN SOUTH-AFRICA

Authors
Citation
T. Thale, PARADIGMS LOST - PARADIGMS REGAINED - WORKING-CLASS AUTOBIOGRAPHY IN SOUTH-AFRICA, Journal of southern african studies, 21(4), 1995, pp. 613-622
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Area Studies
ISSN journal
03057070
Volume
21
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
613 - 622
Database
ISI
SICI code
0305-7070(1995)21:4<613:PL-PR->2.0.ZU;2-Y
Abstract
This article will examine the continuities and variations in four auto biographies representing different epochs in the development of worker organisations in South Africa: Clements Kadalie's My Life and the ICU (1970), Naboth Mokgatle's The Autobiography of an Unknown South Afric an (1971), Emma Mashinini's Strikes Have Followed Me All My Life (1989 ) and Alfred Qabula's Cruel Beyond Belief (1989).(1) These four texts have received but scant attention from literary critics in South Afric a. This paper is therefore an intervention to 'retrieve' these texts f rom the margins of discourses on South African literature. My argument will be that the autobiographers' positions as activists constitute t heir primary narrative identity. The recreation of other identities, s uch as childhood, ethnicity, family and the construction of historical narratives, will be demonstrated to ensue from this primary preoccupa tion of the autobiographers; they negotiate their subject positions fr om what is reconcilable with their identities as trade unionists cum a ctivists. The primary identity is itself also contingent on the writer 's location at the moment of writing.