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Author Karen Jennings on her latest novel Crooked Seeds and how social media has impacted our sense of history

Author Karen Jennings on her latest novel Crooked Seeds and how social media has impacted our sense of history

You've said that the vision of the lighthouse from An Island (2019) came to you in a dream, during an afternoon nap. What about the story of Crooked Seeds?
I'm afraid it was a lot less neat and tidy. In fact, it is hard to trace the process or progression clearly. Some of the ideas or aspects of the characters go back as far as the 1980s, when I was a little girl and overheard a conversation between my dad and his colleague. She told him about growing up, how her mother had always favoured her son and treated her daughters as inferior to him.
Other aspects of the novel go to my mid-20s when I passed a ditch being dug by the municipality. Each day, when I passed that ditch, they had dug up more artefacts — nothing interesting, just old handbags and bottles and bits of cutlery and rope and plastic. I remember knowing there was something important here, in this digging, the finding of things. I didn't know what, though. Countless other little experiences and thoughts and dreams made their way into the chaos in my mind and came out (hopefully) neatly on the pages.
The South African landscape is almost a character in the novel. Is it at all possible to write about South Africa and Africa without talking about socio-political issues?
Can one write about anywhere without including socio-political issues? I am a proud South African. South Africa is my home. I love its people and places. I am not afraid to say it publicly: everything that is good in this country is because of the South African people. For the bad, yes, we can blame history, but we can also blame a government that puts cronyism before the people. Most days, I want to ask our president: How do you sleep at night? Aren't you ashamed of your spinelessness?
In the novel, there are also themes of memory, trauma and historical reconciliation. How did you approach post-Apartheid South Africa?
A lot of reading. I make sure to read widely when doing research — newspapers, interviews, diaries, letters, fiction, non-fiction. We all understand, of course, that fiction is not meant to be focused on fact-giving. But in order for fiction to have value – in order for it to have an essential authenticity — research must be done. In addition, I spend a lot of time 'in place' — walking, looking, observing. The 17th century Japanese Haiku master Basho said that if you want to write about the tree then you must go to the tree. I believe that completely. Go to the tree — physically and through research.
How has the landscape for postcolonial African literature changed since you began writing?
This is an interesting question. Recently, someone from a different country in Africa indicated to me that young Africans don't know what colonialism is. It is something 'too far back' in history to be thought of — yet we still see the socio-economic consequences of it to this day; we still see knock-on effects such as cultural appropriation. Whatever the young know or don't know about colonialism or postcolonialism, they don't seem to be learning it from books. A few days ago, I was explaining to a student of mine that the only thing she needed to work on in her essay is to write smoother sentences. She asked me if I could recommend a TikTok channel to help her with that. I said, 'How can you ask me that? What you need to do is read, not watch Tiktok!'
An Island and Crooked Seeds have a nonlinear narrative and yet it's effortless to envision the story. Talk us through your writing process.
Short answer: agony. Long answer: lots of agony. The very dismal truth is that I write draft after draft after draft, on and on and on and on until I am sick and depressed. But by the end I know my character and my story completely.
Your portrayal of marginalised characters has been praised for its nuance. What responsibility do you feel writers have when representing voices that have historically been silenced?
This is a tough question. One must always approach one's writing with sensitivity. Even when one comes to it with good intentions, there is always a worry about appropriation or being offensive. Thorough research can help, as can using third-person narrators and avoiding giving characters accents or using patois that can come across as condescending. These are all practical matters. But consider the forgotten people in history — not necessarily heroes, just ordinary people whose role in our country's past and therefore in its present might be forgotten unless you write about them.
Last year, I wrote a number of short stories related to slaves and servants at the Cape of Good Hope/Cape Colony in the 18th century. These stories were based on archival and other research. If I don't write about them, will someone else do it? Will AI remember our pasts for us and write about it for us? Already most South Africans don't even know the truth about South Africa's slave past. Shouldn't they know that history and the people it affected and in what ways? May that inspire them too to explore, to research and to write.
Mazumdar is a Delhi-based independent writer

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OTT releases this week: A week full of masti
OTT releases this week: A week full of masti

Hans India

timean hour ago

  • Hans India

OTT releases this week: A week full of masti

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No apology coming: Peyton Manning breaks silence on Donald Trump photo, says he won't apologize for being respectful
No apology coming: Peyton Manning breaks silence on Donald Trump photo, says he won't apologize for being respectful

Time of India

time5 hours ago

  • Time of India

No apology coming: Peyton Manning breaks silence on Donald Trump photo, says he won't apologize for being respectful

Peyton Manning addresses Trump photo uproar, says he was just being polite (Imagn Images) Peyton Manning has never been one to get dragged into political drama, and he isn't starting now. A recently resurfaced photo of the legendary quarterback alongside Donald Trump Jr. has reignited chatter on social media, but Manning seems completely unbothered by the noise. Peyton Manning refuses to backtrack on Trump photo, calls it a gesture of respect The image in question—originally taken in 2016—shows the Hall of Famer casually posing with Trump Jr. during what appeared to be a non-political event. It gained traction again recently, amassing over 5,000 likes on X (formerly Twitter), with users weighing in amid an increasingly polarized political climate. Despite the attention, Manning has made it clear he's not offering any apology or explanation. A source close to him revealed his response: 'I've taken thousands of photos with people over the years. I'm not in the business of explaining every one of them.' For someone who's kept his political leanings mostly private throughout his post-NFL life, his response is true to form. Although Manning has rarely spoken publicly about his politics, campaign finance records do suggest a longstanding support for the Republican Party. According to the Federal Election Commission, the former Colts and Broncos quarterback has donated $17,900 to GOP candidates since 2004. His contributions include $7,300 to Mitt Romney's presidential campaign and $2,700 to Jeb Bush's 2016 primary challenge against Donald Trump. Still, unlike other high-profile athletes who have publicly distanced themselves from the Trump family or GOP politics, Manning has maintained a neutral public posture. His approach has always been to avoid the outrage cycles that dominate today's media ecosystem. Instead, Manning has channeled his post-football energy into building an impressive media career. He runs Omaha Productions, the company behind ESPN's popular Manningcast broadcast, which he co-hosts with brother Eli Manning. Beyond sports commentary, he's delving into scripted entertainment, working on a 'Chad Powers' series with actor Glen Powell. While the political world continues to shift, Manning remains rooted in the things he knows best—football, family, and storytelling. His consistency and calm demeanor have helped him navigate both athletic fame and celebrity status without getting tangled in controversy. Even as the 2016 photo recirculates, the two-time Super Bowl champion isn't blinking. His career speaks for itself: from rewriting NFL records to redefining sports media, Peyton Manning has nothing to prove. As one of football's most respected figures, his silence on the matter isn't a dodge—it's a decision to let his legacy speak louder than politics. Also Read: Watch: When Tom Brady made Josh Allen's dad smile big at a Pro-Am golf event— and it's still a fan-favorite clip

South African cricket's rugby moment: How Temba Bavuma's men entered a realm occupied by Siya Kolisi's Springboks
South African cricket's rugby moment: How Temba Bavuma's men entered a realm occupied by Siya Kolisi's Springboks

Indian Express

time11 hours ago

  • Indian Express

South African cricket's rugby moment: How Temba Bavuma's men entered a realm occupied by Siya Kolisi's Springboks

Shakira crooned a catchy ditty in Waka, Waka that readily gets plastered on South Africa's cricket triumphs by the rest of the world. It's worth many loops and had its WTC-sized resurrection, since being composed around the time when Australia last lost an ICC final. But at Lord's, it was strains of that authentic anthem 'Shosholoza' streaming in from some corner with Saffer fans, that truly rung in the arrival of cricket as a champion sporting unit, to be gloried in. Shosholoza, which literally means 'keep going forward', has origins in the Ndebele language, and talks of resilience and relentlessness of hard-working miners, urged to keep chugging ahead. It's an earworm to persevere through tough times and even mundane struggles. While it stood for solidarity during the fight against Apartheid, the haunting melody has rung in unity, and Shosholoza gets sung at rugby internationals by whites, blacks and anyone South African, forming quite an aural dome as the Springboks forward pack moves the scrum menacingly ahead. Its appearance at the cricket, finally hyphenated the two contrasting sports and the greatest Springbok, Schalk Burger, declared that South Africa were now 'double World champions.' The Bokks, of course, have the last two quadrennial world titles. But cricket was now invited to the upper perch of sporting significance in South Africa. Their captain Siya Kolisi dropped a bunch of snaps in a slideshow of how Temba Bavuma and his merry men had spent the immediate moments in the dressing room, soon after lifting the mace: they FaceTimed with the Springboks and Kolisi happily bragged about the crossover. A post shared by Siya Kolisi (@siyakolisi) The first Black captain in SA rugby knew must have known how hard it had been for his cricketing compatriot, Temba Bavuma. 'FINALLY' he captioned, perhaps the only man on earth who knew Bavuma's struggles as a skipper of a mixed-race unit, with its humongous political overtones, intimately. But even Kolisi might admit that Bavuma had a far stiffer and deeper challenge in nailing down a global title than he ever did. The Springboks had won the rugby World Cup in 1995 once before, and never competed, having to prove that they were not bottlers. They lost World Cups alright, but 15 men (or 22) in South Africa had treaded that path to glory, and even when transformation kicked in, with steady inclusion of Black ruggers, there was a blueprint, an attested winning style of play, a clear memory of the most watertight scrum defenses and lineout routines, that teams could fall back on without perennially doubting if the plan worked. The Bokks always carried that straight-backed swag in their skills and systems, that downed not just the Wallabies, but the All Blacks and the French, and the Irish. Kolisi and other Blacks like Cheslin Kolbe, Bongi Mbonambi and Makazole Mapimpi had deeply difficult stories of coming up, but walked into Rassie Erasmus' structure, knowing they were bringing flair and formidability to an already strong scaffolding. Bavuma inherited doubts. And failures. And recurring echoes of those failures, that Kolisi, though an inspirational story in reaching the national team, would never have encountered when wading into battles of might, not the mind. The pin-pricks of cloying doubts started even before the first ball was bowled. And each defeat in knock-outs left a bloodied trail of shattered spirits across three formats and four continents. Perhaps it was this shared misery, the intensely scalding memories of knock-outs, that turned the three wise men – Kagiso Rabada, Temba Bavuma and Aiden Markram – into a unit, so tight, that their resolves were turned to pure granite. That group of players knew the opponent was Australians, not the goal of transformation to include 81 percent of the Black population. They wanted to be rid of the chokers tag, no doubt, but it stopped being a stranglehold that was capable of careening run chases, and like Bavuma said, they found deep reserves of the ability to fight back from almost any adversity, even a Josh Hazlewood torrent. Proteas coach Shukri Conrad had taken his coaching group to a Springboks alignment camp just before the WTC, where pressure situations were minutely analysed and the Bokks' countering mentality broken down into micro simulations. But even the great juggernaut would not have answers to the tea-time snafu on Day 3 with Bavuma restricted by a snapped hammy. 'I was the one telling Bavuma he should not carry on batting. But Aiden and Temba insisted,' Conrad would recall later. Markram knew like a glorious menacing Springboks scrum rolling forward, that it was the mere sight of him and a limping Bavuma refusing to give in or give up and inching forward like sung in Shosholoza, that would break the Aussies. 'Ultimately, these players know better than any of us,' Conrad would chucklingly admit. The finest two of the Proteas batsmen tried. And try is a swell word in both rugby and cricket. Even Rassie Erasmus was impressed. 'Jaaaaa man, coach Shukz and Proteas, so proud Lekka,' he would say with glee. Lekka was the highest approval in Afrikaans. Cricket had happily found its hyphen with rugby.

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