(Lesego
Rampolokeng returns to the Poetry Africa stage this year)
The 17th Poetry Africa – International
Poetry Festival presented in partnership with the City of Durban and the KZN
Department of Arts and Culture is proud to announce the festival line-up, which
promises to be an exhilarating showcase of diverse voices and sounds. Organised
by the Centre for Creative Arts (UKZN) to take place from October 14 to 19,
this festival is a critical platform for self-expression that offers a space
for cultural exchange in the city of Durban.
The festival’s line-up features a
ground-breaking poetry project – a 12 track recorded album entitled Insurrections – featuring poets and
ethnomusicologists from India and South Africa. The project sees the rich
sounds of the Indian music tradition blend with African instruments
accompanying radical poetry from both continents. The Insurrections ensemble will be performed by musicians Sumangala
Damodaran (India), Jürgen Brauninger (South Africa), Neo Muyanga (South Africa),
Pritam Ghoshal (India), Brydon Bolton (South Africa), Bettina Schouw (South
Africa), Sazi Dlamini (South Africa) and Paki Peloeole (South Africa). The
poetry contingent for Insurrections will comprise of Ari Sitas (South Africa),
Malika Ndlovu (South Africa), Sabita TP (India) and Vivek Narayanan (India).
The ensemble will perform on October 17.
Keeping with the musical theme of this
year’s edition, the festival will feature five poets who also work as recording
musicians. Kabomo Vilakazi is a singer, songwriter and actor who also features
in South African poetry circles. Nominated four times for the SAMAs and a
former editor of youth culture magazine Y-Mag, his credentials in the
entertainment industry are indeed formidable. Kalawi Jazmee artist Busiswa
Gqulu returns to Poetry Africa in the middle of her impressive reign on the
music charts throughout Africa. She first graced the Poetry Africa stage as
part of the all-women poetry collective Basadzi Voices in 2008 and has also
performed solo in 2010. South African poet Natalia Molebatsi is also a writer,
facilitator and programme director who recently founded a South African-Italian
music project with the band Soul Making. Her poetry is published in the books We Are (2008) and Sardo Dance (2009). Durban-born poet, performer and MC (Ashleigh La
Foy) is well-known on Durban stages for both her poetry and her musical
prowess. Having earned her stripes as a female rapper, she will indulge Durban
audiences with her poetic oeuvre ahead of her much-anticipated debut album.
Hailing from the Eastern Cape, Pura Lavisa is a writer, performer and poet
whose musical arrangements incorporate percussion and African sounds. Lavisa
will be presenting a collection of poems mostly in isiXhosa.
Returning to the Poetry Africa stage,
well-respected Soweto-born dub-poet and writer, Lesego Rampolokeng, will
deliver an infectious brand of poetry influenced by Black Consciousness and
rooted in the lived experience of people on the margins. Also from Soweto,
Khulile Nxumalo will present works from his first title ten flapping elbows, mama and his latest collection fhedzi, published by Die Hard Press.
Critically acclaimed, Nxumalo was twice named the recipient of the DALRO prize
for poetry. Nigerian-born poet Kole Odutola will also be reading his latest
work at the festival. Odutola teaches at the Department of Languages,
Literatures and Cultures at the University of Florida and has published
extensively both in academia and literature. Another participant with a
background in teaching languages is Kobus Moolman, based at the University of
KwaZulu-Natal. Moolman’s latest collection Left
Over is currently enjoying rave reviews in the press and his performance
will allow an eager Durban audience a chance to celebrate his vast canon of
works.
Johannesburg-based performance and slam
poet Mandi Poefficient Vundla forms part of the Word n Sound collective and is
featured on the online and print publications of Poetry Potion. Crowned ‘Queen
of the Word and Sound Mic’ in 2012, she has graced numerous poetry stages
including Arts Alive and Jozi Book Fair. Another young female voice featured in
the line-up is Sanelisiwe Ntuli, a wordsmith from Hammarsdale who writes and
performs in isiZulu. Ntuli is a graduate of the Kwesukela Storytelling Academy
and regularly features as a storyteller and voice artist on educational
programmes of Ukhozi FM. Also writing in isiZulu is Professor Langalibalele F
Mathenjwa is holding a Doctor of Literature and Philosophy from UNISA. He is a
published writer of isiZulu poetry, novels, short stories and folklore and has
chair Usiba Writers Guild, South African Geographical Names Council, IsiZulu
National Language Body and the United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical
Names-Africa South Division.
Four poets from the Irish poetry collective
O’Bheal will present their work at the festival. This contingent consists of
Paul Casey, Afric McGinchey, Billy Ramsel and American-born Raven. Completing
the international line-up will be Ian Kamau (Canada), Barnabe Laye (Benin) and
Raphael d'Abdon (Italy/ South Africa). Kamau is a writer, visual artist, hip
hop and spoken word artist from Toronto, whose discography lists five
collections, including the popular album One
Day Soon (2011). He will be presenting additional workshops in advance of
the festival. A poet and novelist, Laye has published a dozen books and is the
recipient of the Nelligan Prize for his lifetime’s work. His most recent work
is entitled Poems in Absent, a long wait (2010). D’Abdon is an
Italian scholar, writer, editor and translator and a post-doctoral fellow in
the English Studies Department at UNISA. As an editor, D’Abdon recently
published Marikana - A Moment in Time,
as well as an anthology of poetry about the massacre and his own collection, Sunnyside Nightwalk.
The festival’s community outreach programme
will see poets visit over 20 community centres, campuses and tertiary education
departments across Durban and beyond. In addition, participating poets will
visit twenty schools to discuss reading, writing and the performance aspects of
poetry.
For more details about this year’s Poetry
Africa, visit www.cca.ukzn.ac.za or
call 031 260 2506.
Organised by the Centre for Creative Arts
(University of KwaZulu-Natal), the 17th Poetry Africa is funded by the City of
Durban and the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Arts and Culture. The Centre for
Creative Arts is housed in the College of Humanities at the University of
KwaZulu-Natal. The CCA is a special project of the Deputy Vice-Chancellor,
Professor Cheryl Potgieter, in the College of Humanities at UKZN.