Projects initiated and managed by Lucy Graham:

 

April 2018:

Fallism and the Cultural Politics of Decolonisation
Panels and seminars with students from UWC and UCT

At Duke University, New York University, University of North Carolina, Wabash College, De Pauw University

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2016-2017:

The Mendi Centenary Project 2017 

Through the arts and the academy, this project commemorates the sinking of the SS Mendi that occurred on 21 February 1917, during the First World War. It pays tribute to the South African Native Labour Contingent, and the men on the Mendi who died en route to fight for their dignity and human rights through service to the war effort.

The project will converse with the Mendi centenary commemoration organised for 2017 by the South African Department of Defence and hosted by the University of Cape Town. 

Scheduled for 2017, the project will comprise an exhibition and a conference at the the Centre for African Studies, University of Cape Town, as well as a musical tribute. 

Background

Exhibition

Conference

Musical Tribute

Organisers 

See: "Re-framing SS Mendi: Curating and commemorating a 'missing' memory in South Africa" 

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2014-2016:

The New York University Postcolonial Colloquium Presents: 

The award-winning documentary:

Miners Shot Down

The director reconstructs the sequence of events that unfolded when mineworkers striking for a living wage were massacred by state police forces in August 2012 at Marikana platinum mine, South Africa. 

Screening and interview with the director, Rehad Desai

6 November 2014, 6-8pm

The Event Space, NYU English Department, 244 Greene St

 

South Africa after Twenty Years of Democracy

7 November 2014, 6-8pm

The Event Space, NYU English Department, 244 Greene St

This colloquium takes as inspiration the exhibition of South African photographer Ernest Cole’s work at  New York University’s Grey Gallery; the return of South African writer  Nat Nakasa’s remains from upstate New York to South Africa; and the Ubuntu Music and Arts Festival at Carnegie Hall, New York – all of which coincide with South Africa’s twenty-year anniversary of democracy in 2014, and gesture to a long history of transnational flow between South Africa and New York.

The colloquium seeks to address the following questions: If ubuntu refers to an African sense of ethics expressed in the idiom umntu ngumntu ngabantu (Xhosa)/ umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu” (Zulu) (“a person is a person through other people”), what relationships or dissonance can be traced between the continuing structures of oppression exposed in Cole’s House of Bondage (New York: Random House, 1967) and South Africa as home of ubuntu? How does the idea of ubuntu appear through the lens of black intellectual traditions in South Africa, and can black intellectual traditions themselves be understood through the lens of ubuntu? How are dispossession and unfreedom in South Africa being framed and understood? To what extent can the humanities and social sciences work beyond exclusionary Western or European conceptualizations of humanism or “humanness”, without reifying or romanticizing what Achille Mbembe has called “the nativist reflex”? To what extent do South African issues speak to the rest of the world, particularly to the United States?

Speakers:

Jacob Dlamini:

“Askari: Apartheid Collaborators”

Xolela Mangcu:

“Nelson Mandela: Towards a New Angle of Vision”

Hlonipha Mokoena:

“The Policeman, Reconsidered”

Mark Sanders:

“Learning Zulu, In Hindsight”

Jennifer Wenzel:

“Amandla Awethu: Energy, Infrastructure, Rights, Services”

 

The outputs from this colloquium were published in a special issue of Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, guest-edited by Lucy Graham, in 2016.

 

MinersShotDown Screening    HouseofBondage HomeofUbuntu

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 2012

Launch of monograph, State of Peril: Race and Rape in South African Literature

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RESEARCH INTERESTS


Postcolonial studies; South African and African studies; feminism and gender studies (particularly the legacies of postcolonial patriarchies); debates on decoloniality and intersectionality. 


TEACHING 


Teaching as collaboration, debate, conversation; South African, African and postcolonial literature and culture; feminism and gender studies; debates on decoloniality and intersectionality. 

Supervisions:

Currently supervising MA and PhD scholars at the University of Johannesburg on: post-apartheid representations of Nelson Mandela; alternative masculinities in South African fiction; childlessness in selected literary texts by African women; theatre and the law in post-apartheid South Africa; intimate partner violence in texts by women in the United States.   

Tamlyn Ross, "The Apartheid Censors' Responses to the Work of Frantz Fanon, Amilcar Cabral and Steve Biko", MA thesis, Stellenbosch University, completed 2012.

Andrea Buchanan, "Perspectives of Estrangement: England and Englishness in the Novels of Justin Cartwright", MA thesis, Stellenbosch University, completed 2012.

Emmanuel Ngwira, "Writing Marginality: Authorship, History and Gender in the Fiction of Zoë Wicomb and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie", PhD thesis, Stellenbosch University, completed 2012.

AWARDS AND GRANTS


British Academy Newton Mobility Grant for "The Poetics and Politics of World War One Commemoration in South Africa and the United Kingdom", 2017, which enabled The Mendi Centenary Conference:
http://www.africanstudies.uct.ac.za/cas/features/2016/mendi/conference

National Research Foundation (NRF) "Scarce Skills" Research Fellowship, University of the Western Cape, 2016-2018.
Oppenheimer Memorial Trust Postdoctoral Grant 2016-2018.

Fulbright Visiting Research Scholar, New York University, 2013 - 2014.

National Research Foundation (NRF) Thuthuka Grant for the project “Cape Chronicles”, Stellenbosch University.  

Commonwealth Scholarship, University of Oxford.

Overseas Research Scholarship, University of Oxford.

Patrick and Margaret Flanagan Scholarship for study in the United Kingdom.

Scholarship from Cornell University to attend The School of Criticism and Theory, June - July 2004. 

Scholarship from DAAD and the Ministry of Justice and European Affairs, Lower Saxony, Germany, to attend the International Women’s University (Ifu), Hanover, Germany, July – October 2000.

Full Academic Colours, Rhodes University, South Africa.

  • Books
  • Articles
  • Chapters in Books
  • Reviews
  • Other
Books in progress: 
1) "Who is Speaking Me?" J.M. Coetzee, Women's Voices and Feminism (monograph)
2) Post-apartheid Dissonance: The Cultural Politics of Post-"Rainbow Nation" South Africa (monograph)

Published: 

The Bloomsbury Handbook to J.M. Coetzee

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Published monograph:

State of Peril Cover

State of Peril: Race and Rape in South African Literature, Oxford University Press, 2012.

This monograph demonstrates how, despite the fact that most incidents of rape in South Africa are not interracial, narratives of interracial rape have (until very recently) dominated the national imaginary. Seeking to understand this phenomenon, the study draws on Michel Foucault's ideas about sexuality and biopolitics, as well as Judith Butler's speculations on race and cultural melancholia. Historical analysis of the body politic provides the backdrop for close readings of literature by Olive Schreiner, Sol Plaatje, Sarah Gertrude Millin, Njabulo Ndebele, J.M. Coetzee, Zoë Wicomb and others.

Ultimately, State of Peril argues for ethically responsible interpretations that recognize high levels of sexual violence in South Africa while parsing the racialized inferences and assumptions implicit in literary representations of bodily violation.

 

 

Reviews:

"This is a highly original, stimulating, and intelligent book that breaks new ground in literary-cultural studies of South Africa." --Laura Chrisman, author of Rereading the Imperial Romance

"State of Peril offers a radical alternative history of South African literature, showing the degree to which its imaginative core has been consistently engaged with issues of race and gender violence." --Robert J.C. Young, author of Colonial Desire: Hybridity in Theory, Culture and Race.

"The readings of Olive Schreiner's Trooper Peter Halket of Mashonaland (1897), Daphne Rooke's Mittee (1952), Arthur Maimane's Victims (1976), and J. M. Coetzee's Disgrace (1999) are particularly good...Highly recommended." --Choice

Review of State of Peril in Africa: Journal of the International African Institute, 84.4 (2014)

Review of State of Peril in Safundi: The Journal of South African and American Studies, 14.4 (2013)


Review of State of Peril in Journal of Postcolonial Writing 50.2 (2014)

"Survival Beyond Abuse?", Review of State of Peril in Journal of Southern African Studies 39.3 (2013

Review of State of Peril in Agenda: Empowering Women for Gender Equity 27.1 (2013)

"Melanie and Lucy" , Review of State of Peril in Times Literary Supplement (TLS), February 8 2013, No. 5732

Sean O'Toole, "Figuring Brutality", February 19, 2013


ARTICLES IN PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS


"In the beginning was the collective...: Fallism, collectives, and 'leaderlessness'", co-authored with Khanyisile Mbongwa, Safundi: Journal of South African and American Studies

"Falling: Literature and leaderless movements", Research in African Literatures, 3.1 (Spring), 2022.

"The Themis Project and 'The Vietnam Project': J.M. Coetzee in the United States, 1968-1971". Bulletin of the National Library of South Africa. June 2022.

"Decolonising Adamastor: From The Lusiads to Thirteen Cents." The Journal of Literary Studies. June 2022.


"Es'kia Mphahlele and the censors." Bulletin of the National Library of South Africa. December 2020.

 "On misogyny and the women who say 'no.'Safundi. Special issue edited by Rita Barnard. 2020.

 "Intercepting Disgrace: Lacuna and 'Letter to John Coetzee'". Safundi: Journal of South African and American Studies. April 2020. Available online.

"A captured occupation?: On NGOs, accountability and grassroots movements." Bulletin of the National Library of South Africa. June 2018.

"'Utterly Divided'?: The Feminist Perspectives of Lauretta Ngcobo and Olive Schreiner, Scrutiny2, 2017.

"Olive Schreiner and Rhodes Must Fall", Bulletin of the National Library of South Africa, December 2016.

Introduction, as guest editor, special issue on "South Africa After Two Decades of Democracy", Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, Vol. 18 Issue 6, 2016.  

"Representing Marikana", Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies, Vol 18. Issue 6, 2016.

"'Then you are a man, my son': Kipling and the Zuma rape trial", Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East (Duke University), Vol. 36. No. 2, 2016. 

"'We used to work together': Life & Times of a Caretaker in Sea Point", co-written with Hugh Macmillan, Bulletin of the National Library of South Africa, July 2016.

"'A Strange Antipathy': Elsa Joubert and 'Poppie Nongena'", Bulletin of the National Library of South Africa, December 2014.

"'Bucks Without Hair' and 'Bullet Points': Social and Metacommentary in Justin Cartwright's In Every Face I Meet", co-written with Andrea Buchanan, Journal of Commonwealth Literature, March 2014, vol.49. no. 1 47-62.

"The Importance of Confronting a Colonial, Patriarchal and Racist Past in Addressing Post-apartheid Sexual Violence"African Safety Promotion, Volume 11, No. 2, December 2013.

"The 'Great Coloured Question' and the Cosmopolitan: Fiction, History and Politics in David's Story"co-written with Hugh Macmillan), SAFUNDI: The Journal of American and South African Studies, Special Issue on "Zoë Wicomb: The Cape and the Cosmopolitan", 12.3&4, 2011: 331-347.

 "Amakwerekwere and Other Aliens: District 9 and Hospitality," District 9: A Roundtable, SAFUNDI: The Journal of American and South African Studies 11.1 (2010): 155-175.

"Consequential Changes': Daphne Rooke's Mittee in America and South Africa", SAFUNDI: The Journal of American and South African Studies 10.1, 2009: 43-58.

"Baby Tshepang and post-apartheid narratives", Scrutiny2, 13.1, 2008.

"Reimagining the Cave: Gender, Land and Imperialism in Olive Schreiner's Trooper Peter Halket of Mashonaland,"
 English Studies in Africa 50.1, 2007: 25-40.

"Reading the Unspeakable: Rape in J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace", Journal of Southern African Studies 29.2, 2003: 433-444.

"A Hidden Side to the Story": Reading Rape in Recent South African Literature", Journal of Post-Colonial Writing 24.1&2, 2002: 9-24.

"Yes, I Am Giving Him Up": Sacrificial Responsibility in J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace", Scrutiny2, 7.2, 2002: 4-15.

CHAPTERS IN BOOKS


"Rereading Mating Birds", in Lewis Nkosi. The Black Psychiatrist/ Flying Home, Critical Perspectives and Homage, eds. Henrichsen Dag, Astrid Starck, Basel: Basler Afrika, 2021. 

"'Consequential Changes': Daphne Rooke's Mittee in America and South Africa", Print, Text and Book Cultures in South Africa, ed. Andrew van der Vlies, Wits University Press, 2012. 

"Textual Transvestism: The Female Voices of J.M. Coetzee", J.M. Coetzee: The Ethics of Intellectual Practice, ed. Jane Poyner, Ohio University Press, 2006.

"'Bathing Area - for Whites Only' : Reading Prohibitive Signs and "Black Peril" in Mating Birds", Still Beating the Drum: Critical Perspectives on Lewis Nkosi, ed. Lindy Stiebel, Rodopi, 2005, and Wits University Press, 2006.

"Reading the Unspeakable: Rape in J.M. Coetzee's Disgrace", Versions/ Subversions Conference on African Literature, Berlin, Germany, 1-4 May 2002. Published in the conference proceedings. Rodopi 2005.

Lewis Nkosi, World Writers in English, Thomson Gale, 2003.

J.M. Coetzee, World Writers in English, Thomson Gale, 2003.

REVIEWS 


"J.M. Coetzee and his South African Contemporaries", review of Jarad Zimbler, J.M. Coetzee and the Politics of Style (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014) in the Cambridge Quarterly, forthcoming 2016.

Mike Marais, Secretary of the Invisible: The Idea of Hospitality in the Fiction of J. M. Coetzee
(Amsterdam: Rodopi, 2009) in English in Africa 38.3 (Oct 2011), pp. 141-144.

J. M. Coetzee, Inner Workings (Harvill Secker, 2007), in Acta Scientarum: Language and Culture (Universidade Estadual de Mariagá, Brazil), 31:1 (Jan 2009), p. 109 (with Hugh Macmillan).

Harriet A. Washington, Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present (New York: Broadway Books, 2006) in Safundi: Journal of South African and American Studies, 10:2 (2009), pp. 264-5.

Derek Attridge, J. M. Coetzee and the Ethics of Reading (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2004), in Research in African Literatures, 37:4 (Winter 2006), p. 240.

"Seven Settler Poems", Herri 5, 2021.

"On the other side of the curve", poem/ endtimes doggerel, Herri 3, 2020.

"Correspondence with Lewis Nkosi, 2002", LVG blogpost, 1 August 2019


"On linguistic citizenship", LVG blogpost, 22 November 2018

"Fifty shades of mad, bad and dangerous",
LVG blogpost, 31 May 2018

"LVG pomes",
 poems (updated sporadically)

"Premier Zille, did you forget your promises?", Opinion/ Open letter, Cape Times, 27 July 2017.

Sea Point Chronicles http://seapointpromenade.blogspot.com/

"Sheets, Feathers and Snow in Alexandre Marine's 'Waiting for the Barbarians'" (2012)

http://slipnet.co.za/view/blog/sheets-feathers-and-snow-in-alexandre-marines-stage-adaptation-of-waiting-for-the-barbarians/

 

"No Leafy Suburbs: Report on the Launch of Andrew Brown's Solace" (2012)

http://slipnet.co.za/view/event/no-leafy-suburbs-in-new-andrew-brown-novel/

 

"Karoo Voodoo: A Décor Style" (2011)

http://slipnet.co.za/view/blog/karoo-voodoo/

 

"Hot topic. ... South African Crime Fiction" (2011)

http://slipnet.co.za/view/event/hot-topic-%E2%80%A6-south-african-crime-fiction/

 

"Achille Mbembe: Democracy and the Ethics of Mutuality" (2011)

http://slipnet.co.za/view/event/achille-mbembe-%E2%80%93-democracy-and-the-ethics-of-mutuality-notes-from-the-south-african-experiment/

SELECT CONFERENCE AND SEMINAR PRESENTATIONS

"Decolonising Adamastor: From Os Lusíadas to Thirteen Cents", paper presented at the conference, Camões @ Harvard: Navigating 450 years of Os Lusíadas, October 2022. 

"Decolonial currents in South Africa and Beyond", presented by invitation in a panel on "Decolonising the Arts and Social Sciences", São Paulo State University (UNESP), Brazil, May 2022.

"Poetry, linguistic citizenship, and the Zuma rape trial", research seminar in English Department at the University of Johannesburg, August 2019. 

"On White 'Allies' and Leaderless Movements", presented in a panel of UWC and UCT students, "Debates on Decoloniality", at Duke University, Wabash College, De Pauw University and New York University, April 2018.

"Meanings of the Mendi"
, seminar at Queen Mary, University of London, Oct 2017.

"'Ndim musan' ukoyika': Meanings of the Mendi", co-presented with Sive Shosha (UWC student), UWC English Department conference, August 2017. (This paper is part of a project of collaborative translation of poems about the Mendi).

"Who is Speaking Me?": In the archives with Susan Barton
, “Reading Coetzee’s Women” Conference, Prato, Italy, September 2016.

 “Olive Schreiner and Rhodes Must Fall”, The Schreiner Literary Festival, Cradock, July 2016.

"Understanding Marikana through the lens of 'Yakhal'inkomo'" (Representing Marikana), Association for Commonweath Literature and Languages Studies (ACLALS) Conference, Stellenbosch University, July 2016.

 "Representing Marikana", Place and Imagination Conference, University of the Western Cape, July 2015.

"'Then you are a man, my son': Kipling and the Zuma rape trial", A Symposium on Gender and Sexuality in South African Literature and Culture, University of Pennsylviania, November 2014.

"Lauretta Ngcobo's response to Olive Schreiner's From Man to Man", Cradock Literary Festival, Eastern Cape, July 2014.

"States of Peril and Beyond", invited speaker, "The Haunted Present: Reckoning After Apartheid", Duke University, April 2014.

"Black Humor", Panel: "The Comic Mask: Theorising Satire, Humor and Laughter in South African Culture", American Comparative Literature Association Conference, New York University, March 2014.

"South African Photographs and Fictions", Fulbright Project Presentation, African Studies Association Meeting, Baltimore, November 2013.

Seminar on Michelle Alexander's The New Jim Crow
, co-presented with Margaret Hanzimanolis, City College of San Francisco, September 2013. 

"States of Peril and Beyond", English Department Research Seminar Series, University of the Western Cape, South Africa, August 2013.

State of Peril book launch seminar, HUMA (University of Cape Town Humanities Institute), August 2012.

State of Peril book launch seminar, New York University, March 2012.

Organiser and contributor, panel on “Image/Text: South African Photos and Fictions”, Stellenbosch University English Department Seminar Series, February 2012.

Invited speaker, panel on South African Literature, University of York (UK), June 2011.

"J.M. Coetzee and Virginia Woolf", invited speaker, conference on J.M. Coetzee and His Precursors”, University of Leeds, June 2011. Paper entitled:

Interview with David Attwell, “J.M. Coetzee: A Writer’s Life”, Stellenbosch University English Department Seminar Series, April 2011.

Organiser and contributor, panel on District 9, Stellenbosch University English Department Seminar Series, April 2010.

“‘Being Blind’: J.M. Coetzee and the Task of the Translatoress.” Invited speaker, inaugural address of the South African Text/Image/Performance Seminar Series, Queen Mary, University of London, June 2010. Paper:

“‘Consequential changes’: Daphne Rooke’s Mittee in America and South Africa”, University of Stellenbosch English Department Seminar Series, August 2009.

“‘Being Blind’: J.M. Coetzee and the Task of the Translatoress.” Invited speaker, keynote panel of the Modern Language Association (MLA) Conference, Twentieth Century Literature Division. Panel entitled: “Global Writing: New Directions in J.M. Coetzee’s Fiction”, San Francisco, December 2008. Paper entitled:

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