Conditional Tense
Memory and Vocabulary after the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Distributed for Seagull Books
Conditional Tense
Memory and Vocabulary after the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Using the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission as starting point, acclaimed writer Antjie Krog’s essays explore texts from every corner of South Africa in an attempt to remap the borders of her country’s communities. In these pages, texts from black women, Afrikaner men, and comic strips are discussed alongside ideas from African philosophers, an archbishop, and a Nobel Prize winner. Through this extraordinary marriage of academic observation and poetic intervention, Krog endeavors to move South Africa beyond the present moment and toward a vocabulary of grace and care.
344 pages | 18 color plates | 5 x 8 1/2 | © 2013
Literature and Literary Criticism: General Criticism and Critical Theory
Reviews
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Unlearning the Past while Trying to Live with Harmed Tongues
1 Ways of Knowing Mrs Konile:
TRC and the Problem of Translation
2 Revisiting Mrs Konile
The Problem of Knowing
3 Archived Voices
Refiguring Three Women’s Testimonies Delivered to the TRC
4 Shards, Memory and the Mileage of Myth
5 Redefinition and the Battlefield of Guilt and Shame
6 ‘This Thing Called Reconciliation’:
Forgiveness as Part of an Interconnectedness-towards-Wholeness
7 The Letters in the Body:
Manifestations of Interconnectedness and an Indigenous Humanism
8 A Vocabulary of Grace
9 Suske en Wiske:
Sequential Comic Panels and the Iconization of Nelson Mandela
10 Reading with the Skin:
Liberalism, Race and Power in J. M. Coetzee’s Age of Iron and Disgrace
11 Pieces in the Anatomy of Loss
Works Cited
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