Thursday, March 13, 2008


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Apartheid laws · Freedom Charter Sullivan Principles · Kairos Document Disinvestment campaign South African Police
Breyten Breytenbach (born September 16, 1939) is a South African writer and painter with French citizenship.
Breyten Breytenbach was born in Bonnievale in the Western Cape, approximately 180 km from Cape Town and 100 km from the southernmost tip of Africa at Cape Agulhas. He studied fine arts at the University of Cape Town and became a committed opponent of the policy of apartheid. He left South Africa for Paris in the early 1960s. When he married a French woman of Vietnamese ancestry, he was not allowed to return: The Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act (1949) and The Immorality Act (1950) made it a criminal offence for a white person to have any sexual relations with a person of a different race.
In France he was a founder member of Okhela, a resistance group fighting apartheid in exile. On an illegal trip to South Africa in 1975 he was betrayed, arrested and sentenced to seven years of imprisonment for high treason: his work The True Confessions of an Albino Terrorist describes aspects of his imprisonment. Released in 1982 as a result of massive international intervention he returned to Paris and obtained French citizenship.
He currently divides his time between Europe, Africa, and the United States. He joined the University of Cape Town as a visiting professor in the Graduate School of Humanities (from January 2000) and is also involved with the Gorée Institute in Dakar (Senegal) and with New York University.
The work of Breytenbach includes numerous volumes of poetry, novels, and essays, many of which are in Afrikaans, many translated from Afrikaans to English, and many published originally in English. He is also known for his works of pictorial arts. Exhibitions of his paintings and prints were shown in numerous cities around the world including Johannesburg, Cape Town, Hong Kong, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Paris, Brussels, Edinburgh and New York.
Breytenbach was described as the only example of a "nice South African" in the song "I've Never Met A Nice South African". The song was written by John Lloyd for the satirical British TV series, Spitting Image.
He is the brother of Jan Breytenbach, founder of the South African Special Forces, and Cloete Breytenbach, a well-published war correspondent.

Poetry in Afrikaans

Catastrophes (Katastrofes), Johannesburg, 1964 (Stories)
To Fly (Om te vlieg), Cape Town, 1971 (Novel)
The Tree Behind the Moon (De boom achter de maan), Amsterdam, 1974 (Stories)
The Anthill Bloats … (Die miernes swell op …), Emmarentia, 1980 (Stories)
A Season in Paradise (Een seizoen in het paradijs), Amsterdam - New York - London, 1980 (Novel, uncensored edition)
Mouroir: Mirror Notes of a Novel, London - New York, 1983
The True Confessions of an Albino Terrorist, London - New York, 1983
Mirror Death (Spiegeldood), Amsterdam, 1984 (Stories)
End Papers, London, 1985 (Essays)
Memory of Snow and of Dust, London - New York, 1987 (Novel)
Book. Part One (Boek. Deel een), Emmarentia, 1987 (Essays)
All One Horse. Fiction and Images, London, 1989
Sweet Heart (Hart-Lam), Emmarentia, 1991 (Essays)
Return to Paradise. An African journal, London - New York, 1992 (which won the Alan Paton Award)
The Memory of Birds in Times of Revolution, London - New York, 1996 (Essays)
Dog Heart. A travel memoir, Cape Town, 1998
Word Work (Woordwerk), Cape Town, 1999

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