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The Literature Police

Apartheid Censorship and Its Cultural Consequences

Peter D McDonald author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:14th Oct '10

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Literature Police cover

'Censorship may have to do with literature', Nadine Gordimer once said, 'but literature has nothing whatever to do with censorship.' As the history of many repressive regimes shows, this vital borderline has seldom been so clearly demarcated. Just how murky it can sometimes be is compellingly exemplified in the case of apartheid South Africa. For reasons that were neither obvious nor historically inevitable, the apartheid censors were not only the agents of the white minority government's repressive anxieties about the medium of print. They were also officially-certified guardians of the literary. This book is centrally about the often unpredictable cultural consequences of this paradoxical situation. Peter D. McDonald brings to light a wealth of new evidence - from the once secret archives of the censorship bureaucracy, from the records of resistance publishers and writers' groups both in the country and abroad - and uses extensive oral testimony. He tells the strangely tangled stories of censorship and literature in apartheid South Africa and, in the process, uncovers an extraordinarily complex web of cultural connections linking Europe and Africa, East and West. The Literature Police affords a unique perspective on one of the most anachronistic, exploitative, and racist modern states of the post-war era, and on some of the many forms of cultural resistance it inspired. It also raises urgent questions about how we understand the category of the literary in today's globalized, intercultural world.

For South Africans, Peter McDonald's brilliant book will explain many perplexing events and help to heal many wounds. For the rest of us it is food for thought about our own professional judgements, and about the situation of creative writing in our own society. * The Australian Library Journal *
I recommend this complex book and the associated website - www.theliteraturepolice.com - not just to students of South African literatue and history, but to readers of all kinds * C. J. Driver, The Use of English *

ISBN: 9780199591114

Dimensions: 215mm x 141mm x 21mm

Weight: 596g

434 pages