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12
Contents
editorial
LUCAS LEDWABA
Festival in forgotten community seeks to amplify rural voices through art
RATO MID FREQUENCY
Social Death Beyond Blackness
HUGO KA CANHAM
Exchanging black excellence for failure
LOUIS CHUDE-SOKEI WITH IR INDIGENOUS RESISTANCE
Sharp as a Blade: Decolonizing Decolonization
Theme Timbila Library
MALAIKA WA AZANIA
The Timbila Library - 120 books to read by age 28
MING DI
“Through Multiculturalism We Become Better Humans”: A Conversation with Vonani Bila
MZWANDILE MATIWANA
The surviving poet
NOSIPHO KOTA
Seven Poems
MPHUTLANE WA BOFELO
Language is Land
MXOLISI NYEZWA
Seven Notes To A Black friend, The Dance of the Ancestors and Two Other Songs That Happened
VONANI BILA
Ancestral Wealth
PHILLIPPA YAA DE VILLIERS
Voices of the Land: Poets of Connection
MASERAME JUNE MADINGWANE
Three Poems
SANDILE NGIDI
Three Poems
VONANI BILA
Probing ‘Place’ as a Catalyst for Poetry
DAVID WA MAAHLAMELA
Four Poems
MAKHOSAZANA XABA
Poems from These Hands
TINYIKO MALULEKE
An Ode to Xilamulelamhangu: English-Xitsonga Dictionary
KGAFELA OA MAGOGODI
Five Outspoken Poems
MZI MAHOLA
Three Poems
VUYISILE MSILA
People’s English in the Poetry of Mzi Mahola and Vonani Bila
VONANI BILA
The Pig and four other poems
MPUMI CILIBE
American Toilet Graffiti: JFK Airport 1995
KELWYN SOLE
Craft Wars and ’74 – did it happen? (unpublished paper)
MAROPODI HLABIRWA MAPALAKANYE
Troublemaker’s Prison Letter
AYANDA BILLIE
Four Poems
VONANI BILA
Moses, we shall sing your Redemption Song
MM MARHANELE
Three Poems
VUYISILE MSILA
Four Poems
RAPHAEL D’ABDON
Resistance Poetry in Post-apartheid South Africa: An Analysis of the Poetic Works and Cultural Activism of Vonani Bila
THEMBA KA MATHE
Three Poems
ROBERT BEROLD
Five Poems
VONANI BILA
The Magician
galleri
KHEHLA CHEPAPE MAKGATO
TŠHIPA E TAGA MOHLABENG WA GAYO
THAIO ABRAHAM LEKHANYA
Mary Sibande: Reimagining the Figure of the Domestic Worker
TSHEPO SIZWE PHOKOJOE
The Gods Must Be Crazy
DATHINI MZAYIYA
Early Works
KEMANG WA LEHULERE & LEFIFI TLADI
In Correspondence
TENDAI RINOS MWANAKA
Mwanaka Media: all sorts of haunts, hallucinations and motivations
ROFHIWA MUDAU
Colour Bars
OBINNA OBIOMA
Anyi N’Aga (We Are Going )
THULILE GAMEDZE
No end, no fairytale: On the farce of a revolutionary ‘hey day’ in contemporary South African art
SAM MATHE
On Comic Books
VONANI BILA
Caversham Centre: A Catalyst for Creative Writing and Engagement with Writers and Artists
KEITH ADAMS
Vakalisa Arts Associates, 1982–1992: Reflections
borborygmus
LYNTHIA JULIUS
Om ’n wildeperd te tem
EUGENE SKEEF
THEN AND NOW
BONGANI MADONDO
Out of Africa: Hip Hop’s half-a-century impact on modernity - a memoir of sound and youth, from the culture’s African sources, Caribbean “techno-bush” to its disco-infernal flourish.
KOPANO RATELE
You May Have Heard of the Black Spirit: Or Why Voice Matters
KWANELE SOSIBO
Innervisions: The Politricks of Dub
NDUDUZO MAKHATHINI
uNomkhubulwane and songs
RICHARD PITHOUSE
The radical preservation of Matsuli Music
CARSTEN RASCH
Searching for the Branyo
BONGANI TAU
Ukuqophisa umlandu: Using fashion to re-locate Black Psyche in a Township
VONANI BILA
Dahl Street, Pietersburg
FORTUNATE JWARA
Thinking Eroticism and the Practice of Writing: An Interview with Stacy Hardy
NOMPUMELELO MOTLAFI
The Fucking
frictions
IGNATIA MADALANE
Not on the List
SITHEMBELE ISAAC XHEGWANA
IMAGINED: (excerpt)
SHANICE NDLOVU
When I Think Of My Death
MPHUTLANE WA BOFELO
Biko, Jazz and Liberation Psychology
FORTUNATE JWARA
Three Delusions
ALEXANDRA KALLOS
A Kite That Bears My Name
NIEVILLE DUBE
Three Joburg Stories
M. AYODELE HEATH
Three Poems
ZAMOKUHLE MADINANA
Three Poems
VERNIE FEBRUARY
Of snakes and mice — iinyoka neempuku
KNEO MOKGOPA
Woundedness
VONANI BILA
The day I killed the mamba
JESÚS SEPÚLVEDA
Love Song for Renée Nicole Good
ALLAN KOLSKI HORWITZ
Three New Poems
claque
MAKHOSAZANA XABA
“Unmapped roads in us”: A Review of Siphokazi Jonas's Weeping Becomes a River
LINDA NDLOVU
Uhuru Portia Phalafala’s Mine Mine Mine
VONANI BILA
Kwanobuhle Overcast: Ayanda Billie's poetry of social obliteration and intimacy
WAMUWI MBAO
We Who Are Not Dead Yet: A Necessary Shudder
ENOCK SHISHENGE
Sam Mathe’s When You Are Gone
SIHLE NTULI
Channels of Discovery
MAKGATLA THEPA-LEPHALE
Lefatshe ke la Badimo by Sabata-mpho Mokae
PHILANI A. NYONI
The Mad
SEAN JACOBS
Mr. Entertainment
NELSON RATAU
On Culture and Liberation Struggle in South Africa — From Colonialism to Post-Apartheid, Lebogang Lance Nawa [Editor]
DIMAKATSO SEDITE
Morafe
MENZI MASEKO
Acknowledging Spiritual Power Beyond Belief - A Review of Restoring Africa’s Spiritual Identity by African Hidden Voices (AHV)
DOMINIC DAULA
Kassandra by Duo Nystrøm / Venter: Artistry inspired by Janus
RIAAN OPPELT
Get Jits or Die Tryin’
MZOXOLO VIMBA
The weight of the sack: Hessian, history and new meaning in Tshepo Sizwe Phokojoe’s “The Gods Must be Crazy” exhibition.
RICK DE VILLIERS
Review: Ons wag vir Godot – translated by Naòmi Morgan
GOODENOUGH MASHEGO
We Who Are Not Dead Yet by Aryan Kaganof
MAKGATLA THEPA-LEPHALE
SACRED HILLS, A Novel by Lucas Ledwaba
ekaya
MALIKA NDLOVU
Beloved sister Diana
VONANI BILA
The Timbila Poetry Project
MARK WALLER
It’s time to make arts and culture serve the people
LUCAS LEDWABA
'I have nothing left' – flood victims count the costs
KOPANO RATELE & THE NHU SPACE POSSE
On The ‘NHU’ Space
LWAZI LUSHABA
A Video Call with Kopano Ratele on Politics and the Black Psyche, 22 July 2024
CHARLA SMITH & KOPANO RATELE
“Men cannot love if they are not taught the art of loving”: Blueprints for caring boys and men
LAING DE VILLIERS
A visit to the Mighty Men’s Conference and Uncle Angus: A perspective on masculinity
THOMAS HYLLAND ERIKSEN & RIAAN OPPELT
Post-apartheid diversification through Afrikaaps: language, power and superdiversity in the Western Cape
MARTIN JANSEN
Where is the Better Lyf You Promised Us?
THADDEUS METZ
Academic Publishing is a Criminal Operation
off the record
MIRIAM MAKEBA
Sonke Mdluli
ALON SKUY
Marikana 2012/2022
ZAKES MDA
Biko's Children (12 September 2001)
VONANI BILA
Ku Hluvukile eka ‘Zete’: Recovering history and heritage through the influence of Xitsonga disco maestro, Obed Ngobeni
IAN OSRIN
Recording Obed Ngobeni with Peter Moticoe
MATSULI MUSIC
The Back Covers
THEODORE LOUW
Reminiscing
GAVIN STEINGO
Historicizing Kwaito
LEHLOHONOLO PHAFOLI
The Evolution of Sotho Accordion Music in Lesotho: 1980-2005
DOUGIE OAKES
On Arthur Nortje, The Poet Who Wouldn’t Look Away
PULE LECHESA
Sophonia Machabe Mofokeng: Distinguished Essayist and Dramatist in the pantheon of Sesotho Literature
NOKUTHULA MAZIBUKO
Spring Offensive
feedback
OSCAR HEMER
16 October 2025
PALESA MOKWENA
9 October 2024
MATTHEW PATEMAN
11 August 2024
RAFIEKA WILLIAMS
12 August 2023
ARYAN KAGANOF
26 October 2021 – A letter to Masixole Mlandu
FACEBOOK FEEDBACK
Facebook
herri_gram FEEDBACK
Instagram
PhD
ALICE PATRICIA MEYER
Timbila Poetry: Vonani Bila’s Poetic Project
the selektah
VONANI BILA
Vonani's Choice
ARYAN KAGANOF
herri films
hotlynx
hotlynx
hotlynx are sizzling
shopping
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contributors
CONTRIBUTORS
From Alice to Zama
the back page
WALTER MIGNOLO
Presentación El cine en el quehacer (descolonial) del *hombre*
MENZI APEDEMAK MASEKO
The Meaning of ‘Bantu’
ACHILLE MBEMBE
Decolonizing Knowledge and the Question of the Archive
ROLANDO VÁZQUEZ
Translation as Erasure: Thoughts on Modernity’s Epistemic Violence
SABELO J NDLOVU-GATSHENI
The Dynamics of Epistemological Decolonisation in the 21st Century: Towards Epistemic Freedom
MARGARET E. WALKER
Towards a Decolonized Music History Curriculum
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    #12
  • editorial

RATO MID FREQUENCY

Social Death Beyond Blackness

When I go to the Eastern Cape, there were two elders I would always make a point to visit, even if my journey was overshadowed by the grim obligations of a funeral. Leaving without sitting with them never felt right, as if the trip would be incomplete without their wisdom. With them, I didn’t just converse; I entered a world where words carried histories, and Xhosa vocabulary, rich, arcane, and unspoken in the cities, was resurrected with each syllable.

I write this now in the aftermath of the old man’s passing earlier this year. His absence is heavy, leaving only the old woman still standing against time, though diminished by its relentless erosion. Not so long ago, she and I had a conversation that continues to echo in my mind.

I asked why she hadn’t been at the preparations for a ceremony at my home. Her reply was both simple and devastating:

“People as old as me are only called when needed; otherwise, we don’t really exist.”

Her words carried the weight of a life confined by a social order that discards when it no longer consumes. I pushed her to explain further. She said that at a certain age, it’s as though you’ve already died. Society demands your disappearance not literally but functionally. You are a relic, a shadow of what once was, a placeholder in a world that no longer finds utility in your being.

Her description struck me as a chilling articulation of social death, a condition that exists at the edges of life, where existence becomes spectral. The elder becomes an apparition in the communal psyche, animated only when summoned for tradition or necessity, otherwise left to dissolve into irrelevance.

Her testimony reminded me that social death is not confined to the lexicon of the enslaved and colonized, though it finds its most grotesque embodiment there. It is the condition of those rendered surplus to the needs of a world obsessed with utility, production, and the performance of vitality. It is a mode of disappearance, where one remains alive yet is rendered inanimate by the gaze of the living world.

In Afro-pessimism, social death is central to understanding Blackness as a position of ontological non-being. The enslaved did not merely lose freedom; they were ejected from the human order, denied kinship, and subjected to a violence so profound that it reduced them to fungible objects. The elder’s lament reminded me that this fungibility is not confined to the plantation or its afterlives but seeps into the structures of modernity in ways both subtle and overt.

Elders confined to the periphery of social life. Prisoners interred within carceral tombs. Patients battling terminal illnesses, their identities replaced by medical charts and diagnoses. These are manifestations of a world structured to extinguish those who no longer serve its purposes. The gaze of society looks past them, and in that gaze, they cease to exist.

The elder’s words, “we don’t really exist,” are a haunting reminder of how death begins long before the body succumbs. It is a process, a slow unraveling of one’s place in the world. Social death is not merely exclusion; it is the active erasure of being, the severing of the ties that anchor a person to the world. It is the realization that life, for many, is conditional, granted only as long as it is needed, desired, or seen as useful.

This conversation lingers in my mind as a confrontation with the cruel mechanisms of a society that celebrates life while discarding the living. It forces me to ask: how do we reckon with a world that devours, consumes, and discards? How do we confront the fact that so many live among us as ghosts, waiting for a death that has already begun?

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LUCAS LEDWABA
HUGO KA CANHAM
© 2026
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