Oswald Mbuyiseni Mtshali ngu nyana ka Ayola no Unam (born 17 January 1940) is a South African poet. He has written in Zulu, English, and Afrikaans. He studied at Columbia University. He now lives in Greenhills.
First book
Mtshali was born in Vryheid, Natal, South Africa.[1] He worked as a messenger in Soweto before becoming a poet, and his first book, Sounds of a Cowhide Drum (1975), explores both the banality and extremity of apartheid through the eyes of working men of South Africa, even while it recalls the energy of those Mtshali frequently calls simply "ancestors". Published with a preface by Nadine Gordimer, Sounds of a Cowhide Drum was one of the first books of poems by a black South African poet to be widely distributed. It provoked considerable debate among the white South African population, but was extremely successful, winning the Olive Schreiner Prize[1] for 1974 and making a considerable profit for its white publisher, Lionel Abrahams.[2]
The title of the book is explained by an image in a poem with the same title:
- I am the drum on your dormant soul,
cut from the black hide of a sacrificial cow. - I am the spirit of your ancestors. . .[3]
Assessment of his work
Mtshali's work was popular among white liberals in South Africa, which may have made him less of an icon for other black poets. In a 1978 interview, the poet Keorapetse Kgositsile compares Mtshali's case to the Harlem Renaissance in the United States, a period when the importance of white patronage for black work made the emerging black literature more politically complex.[4] Other critics have praised Mtshali's documentation of the struggle of apartheid; poet Dike Okoro (who was born in 1975, and perhaps has a different generational perspective from Kgosistsile's) has said, "Mtshali stands out for the role of addressing oppression and its effects. . . fear as an element of craft and theme predominates."[5] Mtshali's second book, Fireflames (1980), is far more militant, often expressly promising revolution. Mtshali's poems are about the people and their life in a hostile society which he is a part of.[6]
Educator
After his success as a poet, Mtshali became an educator. He was vice-principal of Pace College, a commercial school in Soweto.[7] He taught at the New York City College of Technology.
Notes
- 1 2 "Oswald Mbuyiseni Mtshali", Encyclopædia Britannica.
- ↑ McClintock, Ann. "'Azikwelwa' (We Will Not Ride): Politics and Value in Black South African Poetry" (Critical Inquiry, Vol. 13, No. 3 [1987], 597-623), 612.
- ↑ Quoted in McClintock, 614.
- ↑ Rowell, Charles H. "'With Bloodstains to Testify': An Interview With Keorapetse Kgositsile" (Callaloo, No. 2. [1978], 23-42), 36.
- ↑ Okoro, Dike. "Healing Mother Africa: Contemporary African Poets Explore New Rhythms and Themes" (Black Issues Book Review, Vol. 5, No. 5 [2003], 32-33), 33.
- ↑ Projectstore (21 February 2020). "THEMATIC AND STYLISTIC ANALYSES OF OSWALD MTSHALI'S JUST A PASSER BY". Project Topics and Materials. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
- ↑ Chisholm, Linda. "Redefining Skills: Black Education in South Africa in the 1980s" (Comparative Education, Vol. 19, No. 3. [1983], 357-371), 364.
External links
- "Oswald Mbuyiseni Mtshali", Encyclopædia Britannica.