Abstract

There has been an upswing in attention to South African biography in the past few decades, with a welcome trend towards remaking or revising the canon of important figures from the South African past. This has included edited collections of the works of prominent individuals, and notable among these have been early-twentieth century black African politicians and writers. Historical Publications Southern Africa (renamed from its previous moniker, the Van Riebeeck Society) has published four edited collections of the writings of such individuals since 2008, including Isaac Williams Wauchope, Richard Victor Solope Thema, and A.B. Xuma. A Life in Letters, a collection of Solomon T. Plaatje's correspondence, is the fourth such volume in just over a decade. There are 260 letters, written from 1896 to 1932, included in the book. Most are in English, but some are in Setswana, Dutch/Afrikaans, and a few are in German. Although a number of the letters are from the collections of the Cullen Library at the University of the Witwatersrand, the reviewer counted twenty-seven different collections across three continents. The book is thus an excellent resource not only for historians, but also for students and the general public who now have access to a wide range of Plaatje's thoughts, opinions, and emotions that are evident in his letters.

Highlights

  • 1932, and the revival of interest in Plaatje since the 1980s and 1990s, when his “public memory [was] ... reclaimed” (p xi)

  • There has been an upswing in attention to South African biography in the past few decades, with a welcome trend towards remaking or revising the canon of important figures from the South African past

  • Plaatje (1973); a new edition of Plaatje’s 1930 novel Mhudi (Johannesburg, 1975), the first published novel written by a black South African; and a new edition of the 1916 book critical of the 1913 Land Act, Native Life in South Africa (Johannesburg, 1982)

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Summary

The public and private life of Sol Plaatje

Brian Willan and Sabata-mpo Mokae, eds, Sol T. There has been an upswing in attention to South African biography in the past few decades, with a welcome trend towards remaking or revising the canon of important figures from the South African past This has included edited collections of the works of prominent individuals, and notable among these have been early-twentieth century black African politicians and writers. Willan and Mokae provide a 12-page introduction, as well as short contextual openings to each of the eight chronological parts around which the book is organised. They provide concise context on the “public amnesia” toward Plaatje’s life and work following his death in.

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