Antiquarian Auctions

Auction #115 begins on 30 May 2024

Plaatje (Sol T.)

MHUDI (Signed by the artist)

Introduction: Tim Couzens. Woodcuts: Cecil Skotnes.

Published: Quagga Press, Johannesburg, 1973

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165 pages, map, 8 full page woodcuts, patterned end papers, brown cloth titled gilt on the upper cover and spine, a good copy in a very worn dust jacket.

African Fiction Library. General editor Stephen Gray. Number one in the series.

Signed by Cecil Skotnes on the title page.

Sol Plaatje was born near Boshof in 1876 and educated at Pniel on the banks of the Vaal River. He was one of the foremost black leaders of his generation in South Africa. As the first general secretary of the African National Congress (ANC), founded in 1912, Plaatje was a prominent political spokesperson, interacting regularly with government officials and other leading whites in both South Africa and Great Britain.

Plaatje was much more than a political figure, however. Prior to the formation of the ANC, he was a court interpreter at Mafeking, where he became caught up in the famous siege during the Anglo-Boer War. His diary of this period was later published as "The Siege of Mafeking" (1984). After the war he became editor of two successive newspapers, "Koranta ea Becoana" (Bechuana Gazette) and "Tsala ea Becoana" (The Friend of the Bechuana), both published in Setswana and English. As one of the band of pioneering African newspaper editors, he viewed his role as that of a "mouthpiece" for his people. It was this role that brought him to prominence and led to his selection as ANC general secretary.

His writing was not limited to political developments, however, for in the same year he published "Native Life", he also published a book of Tswana proverbs in both the original language and in translation. On 16 October 1923 while in London, he was the first to have the future anthem "Nkosi Sikelel' iAfrika" recorded, accompanied by Sylvia Colenso on the piano. Later in life, Plaatje increasingly turned his attention to literary pursuits, translating Shakespeare's "Comedy of Errors", "Julius Caesar", and "Much Ado about Nothing" into Tswana.

Plaatje was a significant writer who wrote the first novel in English by a black South African, entitled "Mhudi: An Epic of South African Native Life a Hundred Years Ago". He wrote movingly about this period after Shaka's death, and it focussed on the Ndebele defeat of the Barolong in the 1830's. It was only edited and published some ten years later, by Lovedale Press (1930). The complete manuscript was first published in 1978 and includes a greater focus on "Mhudi" as well as elements of "oral" narrative which had been excised from the first edition.

Sol Plaatje died in 1932. The funeral took place at Kimberley and was marked by the notable tributes paid to his memory by the many people from all race groups who assembled to do honour to a hero. He was remembered as one whose mature knowledge, quiet humour and innate kindliness had enriched his fellow human beings and built for himself a never-dying monument of public esteem. http://zar.co.za/plaatje.htm

First published by the Lovedale Press in 1930.

  • Overall Condition: A Good Copy
  • Size: 8vo (250 x 170 mm)
  • Sold By: Clarke's Africana & Rare Books
  • Contact Person: Paul Mills
  • Country: South Africa
  • Email: [email protected]
  • Telephone: 021 794 0600
  • Preferred Payment Methods: Visa & Mastercard via PayGate secure links and Bank transfers.
  • Trade Associations: ABA - ILAB, SABDA


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