Great African Reads discussion

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There Is a Country
Tour d'Afrique M-Z Books 2012-16
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Tong: There is a Country | South Sudan (Tour D'Afrique) first read: Jan 2016
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I do love the capture of a moment in time that I feel so vividly.
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Tinea, Nonfiction Logistician
(last edited Feb 16, 2016 10:44AM)
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rated it 3 stars
I don't know how but I managed to get a hold of all three South Sudan reads. Not sure I'll get to Emma's War though.
I just finished There Is a Country (review here). I really embrace the goal of the editor, Nyuol Lueth Tong, to pull this collection together and 'start' in the search for South Sudanese literature. A lot of reviewers note the absence of women-- and the absence of all but highly educated elite living and working abroad, speaking English, connected online. And yet, the stories showcase diverse experiences: a comfortably employed teacher, a displaced "Lost Boy" in an IDP camp, a young unemployed traveler, a soldier, a child following his mother across the country. When you start from scratch, each story adds so much, even while pulled from a small pool. According to the introduction, it was hard to find these South Sudanese writers. Perhaps, as for the endless anglophone literature in rich white male voice, the absences also tell a story of who has access to tell theirs.
I just finished There Is a Country (review here). I really embrace the goal of the editor, Nyuol Lueth Tong, to pull this collection together and 'start' in the search for South Sudanese literature. A lot of reviewers note the absence of women-- and the absence of all but highly educated elite living and working abroad, speaking English, connected online. And yet, the stories showcase diverse experiences: a comfortably employed teacher, a displaced "Lost Boy" in an IDP camp, a young unemployed traveler, a soldier, a child following his mother across the country. When you start from scratch, each story adds so much, even while pulled from a small pool. According to the introduction, it was hard to find these South Sudanese writers. Perhaps, as for the endless anglophone literature in rich white male voice, the absences also tell a story of who has access to tell theirs.
Oh, i forgot to add:
How's this for creating a literature of place? The story of the northern soldier taking his last stand in a bunker in the South is set outside Yei, the same battle described in poetry in Beyond the River Yei: Life in the Land Where Sleeping Is a Disease. Tong writes about how we need fiction to make sense of the nonfiction. Together these two stories give a sense of the immensity and hopelessness on both sides of that battleground, more so than a history of the civil war can really show.
How's this for creating a literature of place? The story of the northern soldier taking his last stand in a bunker in the South is set outside Yei, the same battle described in poetry in Beyond the River Yei: Life in the Land Where Sleeping Is a Disease. Tong writes about how we need fiction to make sense of the nonfiction. Together these two stories give a sense of the immensity and hopelessness on both sides of that battleground, more so than a history of the civil war can really show.



How's this for creating a literature of place? The story of the northern soldier taking his last stand in a bunker in the South is set outside Yei, the same battle described i..."
great catch! i have only read two stories in this collection so far, but i will keep my eye out for that.
The editor's introduction is very thoughtful and interesting. He mentions that South Sudan is "still too young to be able to claim a literary coterie" so recommends personal accounts from the Sudanese diaspora of former refugees and war survivors when someone asks for "literature that illuminates its cultures and experiences." But he is "reluctant to refer to them as South Sudanese literature." And so he decided to do something about that.
All but two of the contributors to the volume he compiled are young. He used the internet to call for submissions and he says he "chose these narratives among the dozens received because they epitomize and illuminate South Sudan's current moment of rupture."
I hope some of you will join in this read!