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Friday, October 12, 2012

VOICES FROM THE FOREST



Is this a serious academic work, or just something that should adorn a coffee table? (Review by Keith Millar)

At the outset it must be said that Voices from the Forest: Celebrating Nature and Culture in Xhosaland by Tony Dold & Michelle Cocks is a very handsome book. With its very elegant appearance, and a magnificent panorama of the Great Fish River valley on the front cover, it would be the pride of any coffee table.

However, the question is - what is the purpose of a coffee table book? If it is merely for decoration, then this book is spot on. If it is a serious academic dissertation, then this book is a winner. However, if it is intended for enjoyment by the layman and for general consumption, then I am afraid this book falls short of the mark.

The problem is that you not so much read the book as wade your way through a mountain of information and facts.

The book documents the role that nature plays in the cultural and spiritual lives of the Xhosa people of the Eastern Cape.

It goes beyond underprivileged people’s reliance on natural resources to provide food, fuel and building material and delves into the traditional and cultural uses of the bounty of the forests. Chapters deal the use of plants in traditional medicine, magic and charms, rituals and rites, the rite of passage, traditional food and drink, ceremonial crafts, and Xhosa cosmetics. Also included are a few recipes for traditional meals and a section on Xhosa idioms and proverbs which are also closely linked to nature. The importance of finding ways to sustain cultural heritage and conserve biodiversity in South Africa is also discussed.

The content of the book has been expertly and skillfully researched over a ten year period by the co-authors. Tony Dold is a plant taxonomist and ethno-botanist. He is the curator of the Selmar Schonland Herbarium at the Albany Museum in Grahamstown. His wife, Michelle Cocks, is a research officer for the Institute for Social and Economic Research at Rhodes University. Both grew up in rural Transkei and their love and understanding of the people of Xhosaland shines through their creation of this book.

The book abounds with exquisite colour photographs most of which are attributed to Dold and Cocks. Unfortunately, they are nearly all specific to the subject under discussion. There are very few landscape panoramas which I feel would have given the reader a better sense of the home of the Xhosa people.

The actual location of the area called Xhosaland remains a little unclear to me. Does it include all of the old Transkei and Ciskei or is it restricted to the Great Fish River Valley and the Albany Thicket? The use of a few maps may have made this much clearer.

I also wondered if a little more anecdotal material on the history of the area would not have given the reader a better feel for Xhosaland.

There is no doubt that this brilliantly researched and presented book is a valuable social record of the Xhosa people of South Africa and their relationship with the environment. The question that remains is it a serious academic work, or just something that should adorn a coffee table.

Royalties from this book will go towards providing suitable storage facilities for the informal medicinal plant traders of King Williams Town.

Voices from the Forest: Celebrating Nature and Culture in Xhosaland is published by Jacana Media – ISBN 978-1-4314-0299-1. Suggested retail price is R265. – Keith Millar