Writing Cities at Open Book Festival

A4 Arts Foundation 23 Buitenkant Street, Cape Town , South Africa

Nechama Brodie, Kim Gurney and Sean O’Toole speak to Neo Muyanga about their representations of urban spaces. Date: 6 September Venue: A4 Arts Foundation – Ground Time: 12:00 - 13:00 Price: R45 Full festival programme Book tickets NOTE: A limited number of free tickets for students are available for each event of the programme. Tickets are available on a first-come, first-served basis. To apply, email openbooktickets@gmail.com by 31 August.

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Cities in Fiction at Open Book Festival

D6 Homecoming Centre 15 A Buitenkant Street, Cape Town , South Africa

Elan Mastai, Fiston Mwanza Mujila and Chibundu Onuzo speak to Luso Mnthali about the craft of writing urban spaces. Date: 8 September Venue: HCC Workshop Time: 14.00 - 15.00 Price: R45 Full festival programme Book tickets NOTE: A limited number of free tickets for students are available for each event of the programme. Tickets are available on a first-come, first-served basis. To apply, email openbooktickets@gmail.com by 31 August.

New Urban Worlds at Open Book Festival

D6 Homecoming Centre Workshop 15 A Buitenkant Street, .Cape Town, South Africa

Ken Liu and Edgar Pieterse speak to Mark Swilling about cities of the future. Date: 8 September Venue: HCC Workshop Time: 16.00 - 17.00 Price: R45 Read more about New Urban Worlds: Inhabiting Dissonant Times by Edgar Pieterse and Abdoumaliq Simone. Full festival programme Book tickets NOTE: A limited number of free tickets for students are available for each event of the programme. Tickets are available on a first-come, first-served basis. To apply, email openbooktickets@gmail.com by 31 August.

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JHB launch of ‘August House is Dead, Long Live August House!’

Point of Order Project Space Wits School of Art , Johannesburg, South Africa

Writer, artist and research associate at the University of Cape Town’s African Centre for Cities (ACC), Kim Gurney pens a new book on the evolving art space August House in Johannesburg. August House is Dead, Long Live August House! The Story of a Johannesburg Atelier, published by FourthWall Books, is a fascinating study of the role of the atelier and its artists in South Africa’s fractious art world, and a consideration of the relationship between art and the ever-changing city of Johannesburg. Join us for the official launch in Johannesburg, at 18:00 on 27 September 2017 at Point of Order Project Space, Wits School of Arts.

CT launch of ‘August House is Dead, Long Live August House!’

A4 Arts Foundation 23 Buitenkant Street, Cape Town , South Africa

Writer, artist and research associate at the University of Cape Town’s African Centre for Cities (ACC), Kim Gurney pens a new book on the evolving art space August House in Johannesburg. August House is Dead, Long Live August House! The Story of a Johannesburg Atelier, published by FourthWall Books, is a fascinating study of the role of the atelier and its artists in South Africa’s fractious art world, and a consideration of the relationship between art and the ever-changing city of Johannesburg. Join us for the official launch in Cape Town, at 18:00 on 6 October 2017 at the A4 Arts Foundation.

ACC NOTRUC Seminar Series: Reflection is Part of Rehabilitation: Interventions in the History of a Land Occupation

African Centre for Cities UCT Upper Campus, Cape Town, South Africa

The third seminar in the annual ACC NOTRUC Seminar Series is presented by Koni Benson on Reflection is Part of Rehabilitation: Interventions in the History of a Land Occupation at 15:00 in Studio 3, Environmental and Geographical Sciences Building, Upper Campus, University of Cape Town. ABSTRACT In The Fire Next Time, James Baldwin writes: “To accept one’s past- one’s history- is not the same thing as drowning in it; it is, learning how to use it. An invented past can never be used; it cracks and crumbles under the pressures of life like clay in a season of drought.” This paper looks at the dynamics of invention and uses of history in the politics of a land occupation in Tafelsig, Mitchell’s Plain, where, in May 2011, over 5000 backyard shack dwellers occupied land to set up shacks on an empty field adjacent to the Kaptiensklip train station.  From an initial 5,000 people the group dwindled to about 30 families who continued to defend their right to erect structures under which to sleep. The city offered them temporary relocation to Blikkiesdorp, a dumping ground, miles away from their families and support networks. What ensued was a round of court cases and appeals and, eventual eviction. What started as a document to record the brutality of the Anti-Land Invasion Unit became a co-authored book, Writing Out Loud: Interventions in the History of a Land Occupation written by Faeza Meyer and Koni Benson.   The quote in the title of this paper comes from this book which creatively tracked 545 days of occupation, and raises questions about housing struggles, activism, situated solidarity, racism, writing, and feminist collaborative methodologies of approaching African history.  The paper today will present a draft of a new introduction to the book, with the aim of sparking a conversation about Baldwin’s proposition of not inventing but of reflecting and using hard ‘truths’ about the past in the present, in this case, building and engaging struggles against ongoing segregation and criminalization of landlessness in Cape Town.   More on the full seminar series here. More on the NOTRUC programme here.