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El. knyga: South African Autobiography as Subjective History: Making Concessions to the Past

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This book examines 21st-century South African autobiographical writing that addresses the nation’s socio-political realities, both past and present. The texts in focus represent and depict a South Africa caught in the midst of contradictory and competing images of the ‘Rainbow Nation’. Arguing that recent memoirs question and criticize the illusion of a united nation, the study shows how these texts reveal the flaws and shortcomings not only of the apartheid past but of contemporary South Africa. It encompasses a broad range of autobiographical works, largely published since 2009, that engage with South Africa’s past, present and future. At its centre is the quest for space and belonging, and this book investigates who can comfortably ‘belong’ in South Africa in its post-apartheid, post-Truth and Reconciliation, post-Mbkei and post-Zuma state.
1. Introduction.-
2. Writing Subjective Histories.-
3. Struggling for
Space in Christopher Hopes The Café de Move-on Blues, Sisonke Msimangs
Always Another Country, and Tumi Morakes And then Mama Said....: Words That
Set My Life Alight-
4. Fighting Disadvantage in Trevor Noahs Born a Crime
and MalaikaWa Azanias Memoirs of a Born Free.-
5. Coming to Terms with
Violence and Xenophobia: Mark Gevissers Lost and Found in Johannesburg,
Kevin Blooms Ways of Staying and Clinton Chaukes Born in Chains.-
6.
Contemplating Forgiveness in Desmond Tutus No Future Without Forgiveness,
Lesego Malepes Reclaiming Home, and Haji Mohamed Dawjees Sorry, Not Sorry.-
7. Rewriting the Legacy of Nelson Mandela: The Memoirs of Ndileka Mandela,
Zoleka Mandela and Ndaba Mandela.-
8. Making Autobiographical Concessions to
the Past. 
Lena Englund is a university researcher in the Department of Finnish Language and Cultural Research, University of Eastern Finland. Her research interests include southern African literature and life writing.