Margins
Skinned book cover
Skinned
Poems
2013
First Published
3.95
Average Rating
176
Number of Pages

Krog identifies certain themes that have informed her work since her earliest days as a published poet: politics and the land, family, and being a poet. Skinned opens with poems about writing within the intimacy of family and spans her life since she met her husband as a fellow classmate at school until their middle-age years being lovers, parents, and grandparents. The second part of the selection is excerpts chosen from a volume containing a long epic poem based on the life of Lady Anne Barnard from Scotland, who accompanied her husband to Cape Town and lived in the castle from 1797 until 1802. This volume was written during the height of apartheid and she chose Lady Anne as a metaphor for exploring being white, privileged and on a continent that one finds beautiful while patronizing and looking down on those who live in it. Part Two therefore represents a colonial vision. Part Three contains extracts from several speakers who lived in the land before the likes of lady Anne arrived. She has included interviews with inhabitants of the stone desert, three re-workings of Bushmen or /Xam narratives as well as a translation of an oral Xhosa praise poem. Part Four represents the political turmoil of South Africa and parts of Africa. The poems come from volumes which explored how black people and whites identifying with the oppressed were removed from official history. The volume as a whole concludes by exploring imperatives on the poet, schooled within a western tradition, to learn "a change of tongue" in order to be.

Avg Rating
3.95
Number of Ratings
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Author

Antjie Krog
Antjie Krog
Author · 14 books

Krog grew up on a farm, attending primary and secondary school in Kroonstad. In 1973 she earned a BA (Hons) degree in English from the University of the Orange Free State, and an MA in Afrikaans from the University of Pretoria in 1976. With a teaching diploma from the University of South Africa (UNISA) she would lecture at a segregated teacher’s training college for black South Africans. She is married to architect John Samuel and has four children: Andries, Susan, Philip, and Willem. In 2004 she joined the Arts faculty of the University of the Western Cape.

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