Country of My Skull

Last updated
Country of My Skull
Country of My Skull (Antjie Krog).jpeg
Cover of the first edition
Author Antjie Krog
CountrySouth Africa
LanguageEnglish
PublisherRandom House
Publication date
1998
Pages286

Country of My Skull is a 1998 nonfiction book by Antjie Krog about the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). [1] It is based on Krog's experience as a radio reporter, covering the Commission from 1996 to 1998 for the South African Broadcasting Corporation. [2] The book explores the successes and failures of the Commission, the effects of the proceedings on her personally, and the possibility of genuine reconciliation in post-Apartheid South Africa.

Contents

Country of My Skull blends poetry, prose, reporting, and verbatim testimony from the Commission one critic calls it "a hybrid work, written at the edges of reportage, memoir, and metafiction." [3] It was Krog's first work in English. She drafted it in Afrikaans and translated it for publication. [4] It was edited by Ivan Vladislavic. [5]

It was published in the United States by Times Books in 1999, as Country of My Skull: Guilt, Sorrow, and the Limits of Forgiveness in the New South Africa. In 2004, the book was adapted into the film In My Country, directed by John Boorman and starring Samuel L. Jackson and Juliette Binoche.

Contents and themes

The book centres on the public hearings of the Commission, which Krog and other journalists followed to venues across the country. It collects accounts from the hearings, including testimony from witnesses some of it vivid and disturbing and documents the progress of the Commission, including several scandals in the press. At the same time, the book follows Krog's personal experience during this period, including the effects on her personal life and mental health, as she attempts to grapple with the country's bloody history, with the unfolding social and political landscape of democratic South Africa, and with moral questions about complicity, guilt, forgiveness, and responsibility.

These moral questions especially preoccupy Krog because she is a white Afrikaner who retains a strong attachment to Afrikaans culture and history, even as she is horrified by the ravages of Apartheid. (The book is dedicated to "every victim who had an Afrikaner surname on her lips.") Her sense of belonging in the new South Africa depends on the possibility of constructing a new Afrikaner identity. Krog is also occupied by questions about language: about the inadequacy of any language to express the depth of suffering experienced under Apartheid, and particularly about the association of her native tongue, Afrikaans, with Apartheid. She asks, "How do I live with the fact that all the words used to humiliate, all the orders given to kill, belonged to the language of my heart?" In reflecting on these questions, Krog draws on the moral philosophy, and notably the philosophy of ubuntu, of such figures as President Nelson Mandela and Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who was the head of the Commission. She is occasionally deeply moved by exhibitions of these philosophies, and she admires Tutu in particular, calling him "the compass" and the core of the Commission most importantly, "It is he who finds language for what is happening." For example, as Krog watches Tutu plead personally with Winnie Mandela to testify truthfully, she has an intense emotional reaction:

Ah, the Commission! The deepest heart of my heart. Heart that can only come from this soil brave with its teeth firmly in the jugular of the only truth that matters. And that heart is black. I belong to that blinding black African heart. My throat floats up in tears my pen falls to the floor, I blubber behind my hand, my glasses fog up for one brief, shimmering moment this country, this country is also truly mine.

She writes of the Commission, "here the marginalised voice speaks to the public ear, the unspeakable is spoken and translated the personal story brought from the innermost depths of the individual binds us anew to the collective." However, she also criticises various aspects of the Commission, for example pointing out the inadequacy of the government's approach to reparations and the exploitation of the hearings for political purposes.

Krog ultimately judges herself and other whites to have been complicit in Apartheid's crimes against humanity. Country of My Skull ends with a request in verse:

I am changed forever. I want to say:
forgive me
forgive me
forgive me.
You whom I have wronged, please
Take me

With you.

Reception

Country of My Skull received the Alan Paton Award, the Olive Schreiner Prize, and a Booksellers' Choice Award. It also received an honourable mention in the 1999 Noma Awards for Publishing in Africa, and was named one of "Africa's 100 Best Books" of the twentieth century, by a panel of judges organised by the Zimbabwe International Book Fair in collaboration with the African Publishers Network and the Pan-African Booksellers Association. [6] [7] In 2014, the Library and Information Association of South Africa selected Country of My Skull in its "Librarians' Choice" list of the twenty best South African books written in the twenty years since the first democratic elections. [8]

The book received generally, but not exclusively, favourable reviews, both in South Africa and abroad. [9] [10] [11] [12] Afrikaans writer Rian Malan called it "a great impressionistic splurge of blood and guts and vivid imagery, leavened with swathes of post-modern literary discourse and fragments of brilliant poetry." [13] Another review called it "a work so fine, filled with such passion, that it is difficult to do it justice." [9] Foreign Affairs said, "That such a beautiful book could be written on so ugly a subject inspires confidence in the viability of South Africa's new order." [14] In World Literature Today , Ursula A. Barnett said that it "often reaches the greatness" of Primo Levi's works about the Holocaust. [15]

Several reviewers commented on how difficult it is to read the detailed TRC testimony of victims of human rights abuses, [9] and Nicole Devarenne of the London Review of Books suggested that Krog's personal suffering over the course of the book is supposed to appear "redemptive": when Krog finds unity with her countrymen (especially her non-white countrymen), it is because she suffers alongside them. [4] In this regard, Krog's approach was controversial. Reviews discussed "the danger of appropriation" in respect of the stories of the victims of human rights abuses. [16] Critics debated whether Krog's post-modern "textual and critical highjinks" [17] which serve to introduce an element of subjectivity into the book, and to blur the boundaries between Krog's dual roles as journalist and poet are adequate to the gravity and historical importance of the subject matter, and whether they privilege Krog's narrative of personal redemption and personal suffering over the broader narrative of the TRC and the more severe suffering of black South Africans during Apartheid. [18] [19] [20] The incorporation of passages written in the voices of others, especially witnesses at the TRC, has been read both as appropriation and as "the de-centering or remaking of the self." [21]

In Mosaic, Méira Cook noted that a "post-apartheid genre of 'memory writing'" was already entrenched in "confessional" writings by Njabulo Ndebele, Alex Boraine, and Graham Pechy, among others by the time that Country of My Skull was published. [16] However, in the Journal of Southern African Studies, Carli Coetzee argues that Krog's book is set apart by her efforts "to speak about whiteness, but not simply to whites." The book, she said, seemed "emblematic of a new way of talking about whiteness." [10]

Plagiarism allegations

In a 2006 edition of the literary review New Contrast, poet Stephen Watson, then head of the English department at the University of Cape Town, alleged that parts of Country of My Skull had been plagiarised from a 1976 essay, "Myth and Education," by Ted Hughes. Krog strongly denied the allegation, saying that she had not been aware of the Hughes essay until after the book's publication. [22] [23] [24]

During the controversy that followed Watson's allegations, the Mail & Guardian published claims that Krog had also lifted, without attribution, parts of Isabel Hofmeyr's non-fiction book, We Spend Our Years as a Story That is Told: Oral Historical Narrative in a South African Chiefdom (1994). [25] Responding to such accusations, Krog wrote:

Country of My Skull is my own, highly personalised version of experiences at the TRC. Country of My Skull is NOT a journalistic or factual report of the Truth Commission. In fact, the problem of truth, the ethical questions around the 'making' of truth, the use of other people's truths, the relation between power and truth, and other factors at play in the execution of truth, all form part of the text itself. [26]

Awards

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Truth and Reconciliation Commission (South Africa)</span> Restorative justice tribunal in post-apartheid South Africa

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) was a court-like restorative justice body assembled in South Africa in 1996 after the end of apartheid. Authorised by Nelson Mandela and chaired by Desmond Tutu, the commission invited witnesses who were identified as victims of gross human rights violations to give statements about their experiences, and selected some for public hearings. Perpetrators of violence could also give testimony and request amnesty from both civil and criminal prosecution.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ruth First</span> South African journalist, scholar and anti-apartheid activist (1925–1982)

Heloise Ruth First OLG was a South African anti-apartheid activist and scholar. She was assassinated in Mozambique, where she was working in exile, by a parcel bomb built by South African police.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Antjie Krog</span> South African poet, philosopher, academic, and writer (born 1952)

Antjie Krog is a South African writer and academic, best known for her Afrikaans poetry, her reporting on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and her 1998 book Country of My Skull. In 2004, she joined the Arts faculty of the University of the Western Cape as Extraordinary Professor.

The poetry of South Africa covers a broad range of themes, forms and styles. This article discusses the context that contemporary poets have come from and identifies the major poets of South Africa, their works and influence.

The Bureau for State Security was the main South African state intelligence agency from 1969 to 1980. A high-budget and secretive institution, it reported directly to the Prime Minister on its broad national security mandate. Under this mandate, it was at the centre of the Apartheid state's domestic intelligence and foreign intelligence activities, including counterinsurgency efforts both inside South Africa and in neighbouring countries. Like other appendages of the Apartheid security forces, it has been implicated in human rights violations, political repression, and extra-judicial killings.

<i>In My Country</i> (2004 film) 2004 film by John Boorman

In My Country is a 2004 drama film directed by John Boorman, and starring Samuel L. Jackson and Juliette Binoche. It is centred around the story of Afrikaner poet Anna Malan (Binoche) and an American journalist, Langston Whitfield (Jackson), sent to South Africa to report about the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission hearings.

Karen Press is a South African poet and translator.

Eugene Alexander de Kock is a former South African Police colonel, torturer, and assassin, active under the apartheid government. Nicknamed "Prime Evil" by the press, De Kock was the commanding officer of C10, a counterinsurgency unit of the SAP that kidnapped, tortured, and murdered numerous anti-apartheid activists from the 1980s to the early 1990s. C10's victims included members of the African National Congress.

The South African Civil Cooperation Bureau (CCB), was a government-sponsored death squad, during the apartheid era. The CCB, operated under the authority of Defence Minister General Magnus Malan. The Truth and Reconciliation Committee pronounced the CCB guilty of numerous killings, and suspected more killings.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela</span> South African academic (born 1955)

Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela is the Research Chair in Studies in Historical Trauma and Transformation at Stellenbosch University in South Africa. She graduated from Fort Hare University with a bachelor's degree and an Honours degree in psychology. She obtained her master's degree in Clinical Psychology at Rhodes University. She received her PhD in psychology from the University of Cape Town. Her doctoral thesis, entitled "Legacies of violence: An in-depth analysis of two case studies based on interviews with perpetrators of a 'necklace' murder and with Eugene de Kock", offers a perspective that integrates psychoanalytic and social psychological concepts to understand extreme forms of violence committed during the apartheid era. Her main interests are traumatic memories in the aftermath of political conflict, post-conflict reconciliation, empathy, forgiveness, psychoanalysis and intersubjectivity. She served on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). She currently works at the University of the Free State in Bloemfontein as a senior research professor.

There is a wide range of ways in which people have represented apartheid in popular culture. During (1948–1994) and following the apartheid era in South Africa, apartheid has been referenced in many books, films, and other forms of art and literature.

<i>A Human Being Died That Night</i> Book by Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela

A Human Being Died That Night is a 2003 book by Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ronald Suresh Roberts</span>

Ronald Suresh Roberts is a British West Indian biographer, lawyer and writer. He is best known for his biographies of some of the leading figures in the "New South Africa" such as Nobel Prize winner Nadine Gordimer and former South African President Thabo Mbeki. Roberts has been described by Nelson Mandela as "a remarkable and dynamic young man". He currently lives in London, England.

Anton Fransch, nom de guerre Mahomad, was a commander in uMkhonto we Sizwe. He was killed on 17 November 1989 in Cape Town by members of the South African Police and the South African Defence Force for his anti-apartheid activities, after a seven-hour siege in which he used hand-grenades and a machine gun.

Gideon Nieuwoudt (1951–2005) was a former apartheid-era security policeman involved in the torture and murder of several anti-apartheid activists, including Steve Biko. Nieuwoudt, nicknamed "Notorious", was one of the most feared security policemen in the Eastern Cape for his interrogation methods including wet bags, poison, torture machines and often disguised himself as a priest, dubbing him the "Priest from hell". Nieuwoudt had up to five hearings at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), in connection with the murders of numerous political activists.

Joe Mamasela is a former Apartheid government spy and assassin who was involved in the torture and death of many anti-apartheid activists including Griffiths Mxenge. Mamasela was an askari and part of the Vlakplaas counterinsurgency unit under the command of Eugene de Kock.

Louis Marius Schoon was a white anti-apartheid activist of Afrikaner descent. Marius died from lung cancer, after a long call from Nelson Mandela, thanking him for his sacrifice against the struggle.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Reconciliation theology</span> Theological approach to political conflict

Reconciliation theology or the theology of reconciliation raises crucial theological questions about how reconciliation can be brought into regions of political conflict. The term differs from the conventional theological understanding of reconciliation, but likewise emphasises themes of justice, truth, forgiveness and repentance.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Security Branch (South Africa)</span> Security police apparatus

The Security Branch of the South African Police, established in 1947 as the Special Branch, was the security police apparatus of the apartheid state in South Africa. From the 1960s to the 1980s, it was one of the three main state entities responsible for intelligence gathering, the others being the Bureau for State Security and the Military Intelligence division of the South African Defence Force. In 1987, at its peak, the Security Branch accounted for only thirteen percent of police personnel, but it wielded great influence as the "elite" service of the police.

Annette Seegers is a South African academic who is emeritus professor in political studies at the University of Cape Town, where she has taught since 1986. She is best known for her research on civil–military relations in South Africa and elsewhere in Africa.

References

  1. Harding, Jeremy (1999-05-30). "Picking Up the Pieces". New York Times . Retrieved 2021-11-07.
  2. Renders, Luc (2006-06-01). "Antjie Krog: an unrelenting quest for wholeness". Dutch Crossing. 30 (1): 43–62. doi:10.1080/03096564.2006.11730870. ISSN   0309-6564. S2CID   163235502.
  3. Sanders, Mark (2000). "Truth, Telling, Questioning: The Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Antjie Krog's Country of My Skull, and Literature after Apartheid". Modern Fiction Studies. 46 (1): 13–41. doi:10.1353/mfs.2000.0011. S2CID   146394494.
  4. 1 2 Devarenne, Nicole (2005-08-04). "Communicating with Agaat". London Review of Books. Vol. 27, no. 15. ISSN   0260-9592 . Retrieved 2021-11-07.
  5. Warnes, Christopher (2000). "Interview with Ivan Vladislavic". Modern Fiction Studies. 46 (1): 273–281. doi:10.1353/mfs.2000.0012. S2CID   162327749.
  6. 1 2 3 4 Vijoen, Louise (2009-03-01). "Antjie Krog: Extended Biography". Poetry International. Archived from the original on 2021-11-07. Retrieved 2021-11-06.
  7. "Africa's 100 Best Books of the 20th Century". Columbia University Libraries. Archived from the original on 2019-12-25. Retrieved 2021-11-06.
  8. "Librarians Choice: Top 20 titles, 1994-2014". Librarian and Information Association of South Africa. 2014. Archived from the original on 2019-12-09.
  9. 1 2 3 Coger, Dallvan M. (1999). "Review: Truth, Reconciliation, and Amnesty in South Africa". African Studies Review. 42 (3): 67–71. doi:10.2307/525207. ISSN   0002-0206. JSTOR   525207. S2CID   146863373.
  10. 1 2 Coetzee, Carli (2001). "'They Never Wept, the Men of My Race': Antjie Krog's 'Country of My Skull' and the White South African Signature". Journal of Southern African Studies. 27 (4): 685–696. Bibcode:2001JSAfS..27..685C. doi:10.1080/03057070120090682. ISSN   0305-7070. JSTOR   823408. S2CID   145661560.
  11. Schaffer, Kay; Smith, Sidonie (2006). "Human Rights, Storytelling, and the Position of the Beneficiary: Antjie Krog's "Country of My Skull"". PMLA. 121 (5): 1577–1584. doi:10.1632/S0030812900099880. ISSN   0030-8129. JSTOR   25501628. S2CID   233315248.
  12. Neier, Aryeh (1999). "Uncovering the Truth: A South African look at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission". Harvard International Review . 21 (4): 78–79. ISSN   0739-1854. JSTOR   43648980.
  13. Malan, Rian (1998-07-08). "A guilt-stricken orgy of self-flagellation". Financial Mail. p. 36.
  14. Gerhart, Gail M. (1998). "Review of Country of My Skull". Foreign Affairs. 77 (5): 167–168. doi:10.2307/20049112. ISSN   0015-7120. JSTOR   20049112.
  15. Barnett, Ursula A. (1999). "Review of Country of My Skull: Guilt, Sorrow, and the Limits of Forgiveness in the New South Africa". World Literature Today . 73 (4): 802–803. doi:10.2307/40155254. ISSN   0196-3570. JSTOR   40155254.
  16. 1 2 Cook, Méira (2001). "Metaphors for Suffering: Antjie Krog's "Country of My Skull"". Mosaic: An Interdisciplinary Critical Journal. 34 (3): 73–89. ISSN   0027-1276. JSTOR   44029613.
  17. Ruden, Sarah (1999). "Country of My Skull: Guilt and Sorrow and the Limits of Forgiveness in the New South Africa". Ariel: A Review of International English Literature. 30 (1): 165–179.
  18. Gevisser, Mark (2000-05-02). "Hope in the place of violence". The Mail & Guardian . Retrieved 2021-11-07.
  19. Ross, Fiona (1998-05-02). "From a 'Culture of Shame' to a 'Circle of Guilt'". South African Review of Books.
  20. Snyman, Johan (1999). "To reinscribe remorse on a landscape". Literature and Theology. 13 (4): 284–298. doi:10.1093/litthe/13.4.284. ISSN   0269-1205. JSTOR   23925816.
  21. Rodrigues, Elizabeth (2014). "Antjie Krog and the Autobiography of Postcolonial Belonging". Biography. 37 (3): 725–744. ISSN   0162-4962. JSTOR   24570269.
  22. Carroll, Rory (21 February 2006). "South African author accused of plagiarism". The Guardian . Archived from the original on 2013-08-29. Retrieved 15 June 2010.
  23. "What about the reader?". The Mail & Guardian . 2006-03-03. Archived from the original on 2021-11-07. Retrieved 2021-11-07.
  24. De Kok, Ingrid (2006-03-17). "In Antjie Krog's corner". The Mail & Guardian . Archived from the original on 2021-11-07. Retrieved 2021-11-07.
  25. Bower, Colin (2006-03-03). "New claims against Krog". Mail & Guardian .
  26. Harris, Ashleigh (2006-06-01). "Accountability, acknowledgement and the ethics of "quilting" in Antjie Krog's Country of My Skull (1)". Journal of Literary Studies. 22 (1–2): 27–54. doi:10.1080/02564710608530389. S2CID   145512974.

Further reading