Nyamfukudza responding to questions at the
Indaba Conference
Senior
Zimbabwean writer Stanley Nyamfukudza struck a chord with delegates at the
recently ended Indaba Conference when he meanwhile lifted the blame on the
economy for the impasse reigning in the local book industry and identified the
dwindling publishers’ moral obligation to society and government’s resignation
in the book industry as the problem.
UK-based
Nyamfukudza was the first keynote speaker at the conference on its first day,
July 29, 2019. He was introduced by his old time friend and fellow writer
Musaemura Zimunya whose brief background of their relationship was but timely,
given the theme and environment of the Indaba.
Back
in the days when they were members of a creative writing group at the
University of Rhodesia, Zimunya remembered Nyamfukudza as ‘a quiet,
self-effacing, almost intractable, implacable, and difficult-to-please character’.
The brotherly relationship as writers was further strengthened by the
circumstances that followed the “pots and pans” demonstration, in which they
participated, which happened at the university against the oppressive system. Arrests,
imprisonment, and eventually exile, all these were memories which Zimunya
shared and had the delegates gripped in imaginings of what it was like back
then for these writers whom Zimbabwe celebrates today.
Nyamfukudza
took it further, delineating the context in which the literary boom of the 80s
happened.
How
educating it was to hear it from one who saw it all!
The country had just won its Independence;
the Zimbabwe International Book Fair had been launched and had also become the
prime venue for the NOMA Award that solely sought to promote book publishing in
Africa in areas of fiction, scholarship and children’s literature.
While the political and cultural scene
changed, Nyamfukudza said ‘a seismic change’ gripped the book publishing
industry also.
His stint as editor, actually as the
first black editor, at one of the two publishing houses, from 1981, was a major
task, given the new political environment in which he had to work.
“One of my briefs as editor was …that
the company director informed us the education minister had made it absolutely
clear to the company that they were accorded the room to publish and sell their
materials to the captive readership in the schools because the company had a
responsibility to society to publish literature,” said Nyamfukudza.
And the government, as he would emphasize,
was being involved in the book industry.
“The important issue is the fact that
it was possible for the Ministry of Education to convince publishers that they
(publishers) had an obligation to publish creative writing by Zimbabwean
writers because they were being given the privilege to sell and market their
textbooks to the captive market that the schools made available to them. If
publishers could be convinced in that manner at that time, I do not see why
they could not be convinced in the same manner to have the same obligation to
Zimbabwean society,” Nyamfukudza said.
Today, it is common in literary
discussions to hear a majority of publishers blaming the unstable economy for
the low book sales, particularly fiction books. Some have made it a public
statement that they would not publish fiction because it does not sale.
Nyamfukudza had a different view drawn from
the era of the ‘boom’.
“Never
mind the economics because we knew that if you publish fiction in Shona or
English or IsiNdebele, you would not sell a lot of titles, at most you would
probably sell 300 copies. The best-selling book at that time was Mindblast by Dambudzo Marechera and it did
not sell more than 1000 copies a year, but still that did not stop publishers
from publishing new books that were being written by Zimbabwean writers because
they had accepted that they had a responsibility to society,” he said.
From
his presentation, two major issues emerged – the government’s role in the
publishing industry and the moral responsibility of the publisher to society.
Nyamfukudza, while he accepted the
reality that a writer of fiction alone cannot make a living in a country such
as Zimbabwe, he said writers do not usually write with the money motive in mind.
This point which he made is what is currently the belief stuck in the minds of
some publishers and writers, hence a few fiction titles are on the lists.
“It’s not an economic argument. The
fact that fiction does not make money should not stop new fiction from being
published…I think it is possible for the Zimbabwean reading public, the
government, and publishers to work together for the benefit of the
society,” said Nyamfukudza.
His proposal towards this idea of the
tripartite effort, as it can be called, involved, among other things,
government chipping in by ‘putting books out to tender to try and achieve a
situation where every child has a textbook’. This, he said, would in turn stop
book piracy and further places a responsibility on publishers to publish not
only textbooks but venture into other areas so that children have a variety of
reading material.
How then can today’s publishers let go
of the profit motive?
Nyamfukudza said in other businesses,
people stock some products to keep customers coming and the same can be done by
publishers. Profits they make in publishing textbooks can be used, as a moral
responsibility, to publish in areas (such as fiction) that may not be so
profitable, so as to enhance children’s skills of creativity and not lose
Zimbabwe’s tradition as a country active in creating literary material.
His ideas got a nod from the house,
including local writer Virginia Phiri and a publisher from Cameroon who
commented during discussion time that the profitability aspect has been
inherited from publishing trainings and that the government should be a
facilitator if the publishing industry is to grow.
Zimunya also commented that the
Zimbabwean people are beneficiaries of the vision which government once
fostered in the early 80s so that we become a people who are learned and
capable of creating.
MORE ABOUT THE BOOK FAIR IS COMING!
Lets move forward in telling our stories!
ReplyDeleteGreat info. Lucky me I discovered your site by accident (stumbleupon).
ReplyDeleteI have saved it for later!
Good way of telling, and good piece of writing to obtain information on the
ReplyDeletetopic of my presentation subject matter, which i am
going to present in institution of higher education.