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Chapter 9 - Liberating World Literature: Alex La Guma in Exile

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 November 2022

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Summary

Abstract

This chapter revisits the life and work of South African writer and activist Alex La Guma (1925-1985) to examine the circuits between liberation struggles and the writing of world literature. Born in Cape Town, La Guma grew up in a political family and joined the Communist Party of South Africa in his early twenties. He later became involved with the South African Coloured People's Organisation—a member of the Congress Alliance headed by the African National Congress— during the 1950s, and he left for exile in 1966 after a period of imprisonment and house arrest. Before leaving, La Guma began publishing fiction, including A Walk in the Night (1962) and And a Threefold Cord (1964). While in exile, his work appeared in international journals including Lotus: Afro-Asian Writings, Tricontinental, Presence Africaine, and Moscow News. This chapter traces this evolution in La Guma's career to underscore the connections between anticolonial activism and the creation of world literature during the latter half of the twentieth century.

Keywords: South Africa; Anti-apartheid Struggle; Anticolonialism; Decolonization; Communist Internationalism; Afro-Asianism

The South African writer and activist Alex La Guma (1925-85) departed Cape Town for exile in 1966, an extended period which ended with his premature death in Havana, Cuba, at the age of sixty. He never witnessed the achievement of non-racial democracy in the country of his birth. Yet his experience sheds light on the role that exile has had in shaping South Africa's literary, political, and intellectual life. La Guma shared this experience with many during the anti-apartheid struggle—thousands went abroad either temporarily or permanently—yet it remains incompletely examined as a historical phenomenon. Existing scholarship by Stephen Ellis, Hugh Macmillan and Thula Simpson, for example, has focused primarily on party organization, diplomatic efforts and life among lower-level recruits within the Frontline States and elsewhere. Though committed to this broader effort, La Guma's exile casts a different light on the complexity of this condition for individuals—the constant vulnerabilities of being a political émigré, the strength derived from common cause with other activists, and the day-to-day intellectual labor involved in building a transnational movement. Exile was a time of both political uncertainty and personal freedom, a liminal status of forcibly becoming an outsider while still retaining the commitments of an insider.

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India after World History
Literature, Comparison, and Approaches to Globalization
, pp. 219 - 244
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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