Sun Feb 05 01:25:55 SAST 2012
Sun Feb 05 01:25:55 SAST 2012

African women writers 'renewing dialogue in own words'

Aug 24, 2010 | Edward Tsumele | 4 comments

LEADING writers from South Africa, the rest of the continent and the diaspora are meeting at a women's symposium, called Women's Voices Unite, in Johannesburg tomorrow.

NOVELIST: Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani

The symposium, sponsored by the Department of Arts and Culture, will be opened by Arts and Culture Minister Lulu Xingwana.

Some of the writers who have confirmed their participation include the award-winning jazz poet Jayne Cortez, Lola Soyinka - poet and novelist (married to novelist and literary critic Wole Soyinka's son ), another Nigerian writer, Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani, and Tsitsi Dangarebga from Zimbabwe.

They will share the stage with South African writers who include Miriam Tlali, Fiona Lloyd, Margaret Busby Obe, Lauretta Ngcobo, Henrietta Rose-Innes, Karabo Kgomotso Kgoleng, Luli Callinicos, Arja Salafranca and Masechaba Moshoeshoe.

The theme of the symposium is "Women's words: African worlds: Renewing a dialogue between African women writers and women of African descent".

It is hosted by the department in association with the Windybrow Theatre now also known as the Pan-African Centre for the Arts.

Lisa Combrinck, spokesperson for the department, says that this "think-fest is an African indaba" that will bring together women from South Africa with their sisters from the wider continent.

Some writers come from Ivory Coast, Algeria, Nigeria, and the African diaspora.

She said they hoped to strengthen women's voices through networks.

They will also prepare for the 2010-2020 African Decade for Women, initiated by the African Union.

"Theatre and poetry will also feature prominently in the programme. This is because with writing, debating and singing, in addition to our daily chores, we become fully women," Combrinck said.

 

Comments

Sun Feb 05 01:25:56 SAST 2012 ::
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Aug 24, 2010

Couldn't you get a different Weave color, maybe color 1,2,4 but looks like a color 27 and not Ayoba for your skin color....You look like a Nigerian Hooker.
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Aug 24, 2010

zaman

Kuku ya i,agree is not ayoba at all.
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Aug 25, 2010

Janetvaneeden

Really? An article about women making their voices heard and the only comments are about the colour of the weaves someone is wearing? We won't ever get anywhere if what we look like and our hair and clothes are the only things worth commenting on! Seriously people. Not the issue here!
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Aug 26, 2010

1malesia

Weaves? Such a positve article on women and all you can see is a weave? What a shame, especially coming from women!
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