Pumla Dineo Gqola | |
---|---|
Born | 3 December 1972 |
Nationality | South African |
Occupation(s) | Academic, writer, gender activist |
Awards | Alan Paton Award (2016) |
Academic background | |
Alma mater |
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Academic work | |
Discipline | Literature |
Sub-discipline | Postcolonial literature, African literature, African feminism |
Institutions | Nelson Mandela University |
Pumla Dineo Gqola (born 3 December 1972) is a South African academic, writer, and gender activist, best known for her 2015 book Rape: A South African Nightmare, which won the 2016 Alan Paton Award.[1] She is a professor of literature at Nelson Mandela University, where she holds the South African Research Chair in African Feminist Imaginations.[2]
Gqola was born on born 3 December 1972[citation needed] and grew up in Alice in the Eastern Cape of South Africa.[2] She has a BA(Hons) and MA from the University of Cape Town,[3] an MA from the University of Warwick, and a DPhil in postcolonial studies from the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.[4][5]
She worked at the University of the Free State from 1997 to 2005, and from 2007 to 2017 she was attached to the University of the Witwatersrand, where she was associate professor, and later full professor, in literary, media and gender studies at the School of Literature and Language Studies.[6] In 2018, she was appointed Dean of Research at the University of Fort Hare.[2][5] In 2019, she was appointed to the Department of Higher Education Ministerial Task Team responsible for advising on gender-based violence in South African universities.[2] She has also been Chief Research Specialist at the Human Sciences Research Council.[2]
She was a patron of Etisalat Prize for Literature (alongside Billy Kahora, Dele Olojede, Ellah Wakatama, Kole Omotoso and Margaret Busby), launched in 2013 to celebrate first-time African writers of published books of fiction.[7]
In May 2020, she joined the Centre for Women and Gender Studies at Nelson Mandela University, where she is a professor in literature, specialising in African and postcolonial literature, African feminism, and slave memory. In late 2020, she was awarded a National Research Foundation Research Chair in African Feminist Imaginations, dedicated to interdisciplinary gender scholarship.[2] Her articles for public audiences have appeared in publications including the New Frame and the New York Times.[8][9]
Gqola's first book, What is Slavery to Me?: Postcolonial/Slave Memory in Post-Apartheid South Africa (2010) is an academic, interdisciplinary study of slave memory in South Africa and its significance for contemporary gender and race dynamics.[6][10][11] It was longlisted for the 2011 Alan Paton Award.[12] A Renegade Called Simphiwe (2013) is about South African singer Simphiwe Dana, and combines biography with cultural analysis.[13]
Gqola is best known for her two books about rape culture – Rape: A South African Nightmare (2015) and Female Fear Factory: Gender and Patriarchy under Racial Capitalism (2021). She has also published a collection of essays, Reflecting Rogue: Inside the Mind of a Feminist (2018), which was favourably received[14][15][16] and longlisted for the 2018 Alan Paton Award.[17]
In Rape (2015), written for public audiences, Gqola examines the history, workings, and social functions of sexual violence in South Africa. She argues that rape is an act of power and violence, rather than a sex act, and in South Africa is normalised and legitimised by various social norms, images, and attitudes.[18] Gqola introduces the notion of the "female fear factory," also the subject of her most recent book, Female Fear Factory (2021),[19] to refer to the social discourses with she claims regulate women's behaviour through "the manufacture of female fear," especially by the subtle but ubiquitous assertion of male ownership over their bodies.[20] She argues that these discourses are strengthened by the public prominence of hyper-masculine figures such as Jacob Zuma, Julius Malema, Kenny Kunene, and Oscar Pistorius, and she dedicates a chapter to analysing the public and media response to the Jacob Zuma rape trial of 2005-6.
Rape received positive reviews,[21][22][23][24][25] with the Daily Maverick calling it "brilliant and distressing."[26] It won the 2016 Alan Paton Award.[27] Chair of Judges Achmat Dangor said it was "fearless" and "nuanced and cogently argued".[28]
In Female Fear Factory (2019), Gqola explores in detail how female fear is created and maintained around the world by patriarchal cultures in order to control women and other marginalised groups.[29] Her core argument to address the "female fear factory" is confrontation, to “refuse to keep quiet when trivialisation happens in front of us in public” as this “make[s] more cracks in patriarchy’s manufacture of female fear”.[30] Female Fear Factory received positive reviews,[31][32][33] with fellow academic Jamie Martin labelling it a "timely and critical contribution" to South African feminist thinking.[31]