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Winners of the Via Afrika and M-Net Literary Awards announcedPress releaseThe winners of the Via Afrika M-Net Literary Awards were announced in Cape Town on the eve of the inaugural Cape Town Book Fair, spotlighting a selection of mostly new writers, but also including several well-known South African authors.
The Herman Charles Bosman Prize for English fiction went to debut novelist Simão Kikamba for Going Home, a harrowing account of xenophobia in Africa and what it means to be ostracised in South Africa as a makwerekwere (alien). Marlize Hobbs won the Jan Rabie Rapport Prize for innovative Afrikaans writing. Her novel, Flarde, tells of a young social worker who finds herself in one of the most desolate communities in the country.
M-Net's Lifetime Achievement Award was awarded to Prof Cynthia Marivate, who holds a doctorate in education from Harvard University and has a long association with the M-Net Literary Awards. Professor of African languages at UNISA, she is also CEO of the Pan South African Language Board (PANSALB) and chairperson of the SA Library for the Blind, and is actively involved in community initiatives to promote language, the arts and culture. M-Net awards prizes for literary works in the country's indigenous languages in three categories: long-format works such as novels, short-format writing such as short stories, and poetry. The winner of the Afrikaans novel category was André P Brink for Bidsprinkaan, while the short-format prize went to Marita van der Vyver for Bestemmings and the poetry prize to IL de Villiers for Jerusalem tot Johannesburg. M-Net winners in the Sotho category were Mathediso Aletta Motimele for her highly readable novel Ngwana wa Mpša, while short story author Goitsemodimo L Mancho won for the richly evocative language of Wetsho ke a go rata. No poetry award was made. Only one outright winner was declared in the Nguni category: novelist Nelisile Thabisile Msimang for Umsebenzi Uyindlala, judged to offer an important and accessible moral message to readers. However, two merit prizes were awarded, to Gubudla Aaron Malindzisa for Hawe Babe! and to Philisiwe Lawrette Shange for the novella Uthando Lungumanqoba. The single award in the Xitsonga category went to poet SJ Malungana for Swilo Swa Humelela, an anthology of 49 poems spanning a broad range of themes from marriage to politics, death, education, poverty and abuse.
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