Mine Boy (novel)
Mine
Boy is a 1946 novel by South African
novelist Peter Abrahams.
Set in South Africa,
the novel explores the stereotypes and institutions that discriminate against working-class black Africans.
According to Nigerian scholar Kolawole Ogungbesan, Mine Boy became
"the first African novel written in English to attract international
attention."
Plot
The
plot follows a black miner, Xuma, as he goes through a number of struggles,
including introduced disease from Europeans as well as political and social
trauma. Xuma moves from his town to Malay camp, a black area of Johannesburg, in search of work at the gold mines. Leah, an illegal beer
brewer, gives him a place to live. Xuma is against the racist treatment of
black Africans and fights it. Xuma falls in love with Leah’s niece, Eliza, who
is assimilationist, and then with Maisy. Xuma becomes a successful miner,
working for the supervisor Paddy. One of Leah's tenants, Johannes, and others,
die in a mine accident and Xuma and Paddy lead a strike.
Scholarship
Critic Sally-Anne Jackson focuses on the novel's thematic interest
in the disease and trauma introduced by colonial
rule. Rodney Nesbitt wrote about the
structure, style, tone, and themes of the novel. Claude
J. Summers notes that the book does not
mention "same sex pairings among migrant laborers" in the mines,
although the practice of young men and boys becoming "wives of the
mine" with older men is well known, and documented back to the 1930s.
Megan Jones writes about space in the novel, and the movement of the characters
through the urban space of Johannesburg and what this reveals about the
"organisation of urban life by racist capitalism." Erasmus Aikley
Msuya writes a linguistic analysis of Xuma and Leah's speech in the novel and
what it reveals about them.
References
· Ogungbesan, Kolawole (1979), The Writings
of Peter Abrahams, New York: Africana Publishing Company, quoted in "Peter
Henry Abrahams", South African History Online.
· · Jackson,
Sally-Anne (2007). "Peter
Abrahams's Mine Boy : A Study of Colonial Diseases in South Africa". Research in African Literatures. 38 (4): 153–169. doi:10.2979/ral.2007.38.4.153. ISSN 1527-2044.
· · Nesbitt, Rodney
(1997-01-01). Notes
on Peter Abrahams' Mine Boy.
East African Publishers. ISBN 9789966460479.
· · Summers, Claude
J. (2014-02-25). Gay
and Lesbian Literary Heritage
(revised ed.). Routledge. ISBN 9781135303990.
· · Jones, Megan
(2012-03-01). "Urbanism and Black Mobility in Peter Abrahams's Mine
Boy". Journal of Southern African Studies. 38 (1): 203–215. doi:10.1080/03057070.2011.639206. ISSN 0305-7070.
·
Msuya, Erasmus Aikley. "Stylistic Analysis of 'Xuma' and 'Leah' in
Peter Abraham's Mine Boy: A Verbal Transitivity Process". ResearchGate. Retrieved
2017-04-13.
(PDF download available)
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