Mphuthumi Ntabeni

Mphuthumi Ntabeni is a writer.

Photo credit: Tshepo Madlingozi

PenAfrican: In search of Nongqawuse by Treive Nicholas – a book review

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Books and writers 2025-06-03

"The Great Cattle Killing incident is an extremely sensitive issue among the Xhosa. Nicholas dared to tread where most fear to tread. He handled the topic fairly and with deep empathy. But much of what still needs to be researched and said about the incident remains."

KwaNojoli: The origins and Our voices are left with our bodies: The early black history of KwaNojoli – an interview with Mphuthumi Ntabeni

Naomi Meyer, Mphuthumi Ntabeni Interviews 2025-05-22

"Though our focus is on black history – because it has been neglected and deliberately suppressed – we tell the entire history, including the over-represented colonial and Afrikaner history. From the booklet, you learn not only about Governor Somerset and Bruintjieshoogte, but also about what was there before the European arrival. You learn who Nojoli was, and how all these histories interlock and are joined at the hip, despite our pretensions."

Decima by Eben Venter, a review

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Books and writers 2025-04-30

"Decima is a triumph of moral and aesthetic ambition. By entwining a species’s extinction with personal and national identity, Venter crafts a story that is simultaneously urgent and timeless. Its greatest achievement lies in making readers feel the weight of ecological collapse not as abstract data, but as the sum of countless individual tragedies, human and animal alike."

PenAfrican: Twist by Colum McCann, a review

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Books and writers 2025-04-22

"If you thought Apeirogon, published in 2020, was the most pertinent book McCann could have written for our era, wait until you read his recent book, Twist, which came out this month."

Undoing villainy: Eastern Cape name changes

Mphuthumi Ntabeni LitNet25-skrywersberaad 2025-04-10

"If we mourn what needs to be mourned, we may find enough empathy to understand the legitimacy of calls for setting things in order that are based on natural justice. Only then, perhaps, we shall stop being angry with each other and begin healing from our historical traumas, and, per chance, even celebrate our history as part of our collective identity instead of as something that embarrasses us."

PenAfrican: Ibuyambo Book Festival

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Books and writers 2025-03-25

"This was my first time ever attending a book festival conducted in all the official languages of the Western Cape (English, Afrikaans and Xhosa, but mostly Xhosa). The main objectives of the Ibuyambo Book Festival are to revitalise, preserve and promote indigenous languages of the Western Cape. It made me extremely proud."

Human Rights Day 2025: mind your language! About language rights and recent developments at UCT

Naomi Meyer, Mphuthumi Ntabeni Menings 2025-03-20

"It is pertinent that UCT chose the month of March, when we celebrate Human Rights, to make this long overdue announcement about adding Xhosa as one of its official languages. Globally, throughout the United Nations, the protection of minor or native languages is an urgent human rights issue. South African indigenous languages are not minority but majority languages, yet they’re still suppressed, especially by the hegemonic preference for English."

PenAfrican: Theft by Abdulrazak Gurnah – a book review

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Books and writers 2025-03-03

"Theft is the first novel Abdulrazak Gurnah has released since winning the Nobel Prize for literature in 2021. Epic in a true sense of the word, it follows the intertwining lives of three Tanzanians, Badar, Karim and Fauzia, and their coming of age in the fast-changing world of Zanzibar and mainland Tanzania."

PenAfrican: Eurotrash by Christian Kracht – a book review

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Books and writers 2025-02-04

"Eurotrash, by the Swiss-German author Christian Kracht, is a novel of ideas and what the Germans call Vergangenheitsbewältigung (coming to terms with the past). It is about the grinding burden of having been born into tainted privilege, and the engulfing guilt that comes with that self-realisation."

Imigidi and the (d)evolution of Xhosa culture

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Opinion 2025-01-20

"As much as I understand and respect the now common practice of clustering young boys under the care of a district surgeon or something similar, I lament the loss of other rituals in this arrangement. For one, unless families privately arrange this, there is now no teaching of the young men who they are amid the myriad clan origins. They come out of the mountains without any better or deeper understanding of their history and identity."

PenAfrican: The coin by Yasmin Zaher – a book review

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Books and writers 2025-01-10

"The coin is a book on the psychological stream of consciousness of how to survive in a city that permanently treats you as a foreigner while dealing with its socioeconomic micro-aggressions. It is a short, easy-to-read novel that ticks almost all the boxes for a commercial novel, with quality writing of literary fiction."

PenAfrican: The equality of shadows by Charl-Pierre Naudé – a book review

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Books and writers 2024-12-10

"Almost everyone in the book, including the unreliable narrator, is delusional in their own unique ways. As the causes of delusion are revealed, we see that at the head of the hydra’s hands of delusion is the greatest delusion this country has ever undertaken: apartheid."

PenAfrican: Gompo Book and Cultural Festival 2025

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Books and writers 2024-11-13

"Advocate Tembeka Ngcukaitobi and I, as writers who hail from the Eastern Cape, have had the dream of reckoning with the literary history of the Eastern Cape for as long as we have known each other. When, last year, there were celebrations of 200 years of Xhosa in the written word, we thought it an opportune moment to put the idea into action. The Gompo Book and Cultural Festival to be held in East London on 21 to 23 March 2025 is the tentative first step towards accomplishing this goal."

PenAfrican: Place by Justin Fox and places of the heart

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Books and writers 2024-10-14

"Sitting at the fireplace of Victorian Manor Hotel on one of those rather bitterly cold Karoo nights, I flattered my imagination with the idea that Schreiner once sat before the same fire or on the stoep of the hotel, where, according to Fox, the farmers used to come for gossip and a sip of brandy; this made things come alive in a special way for me."

PenAfrican: Vagabonds! by Eloghosa Osunde: a book review

Mphuthumi Ntabeni Books and writers 2024-09-18

"Mythscape – the desire for interpreting reality through native mythology – as a narrative form is becoming common in books of our era. This is understandable in the case of African literature, since our continent’s sense of self and development of organic narrative structure was interrupted – almost truncated – by the occidental colonial project."

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