Kobus Moolman (born 1964) is a South African writer and academic.[1] He has published ten volumes of poetry, plays for stage and radio, and a collection of short stories.[2] He has won the Ingrid Jonker Prize, the South African Literary Award for poetry, and the Glenna Luschei Prize for African Poetry. He was runner up for the BBC African Performance radio drama competition and has won two Performing Arts Network of South Africa (PANSA) awards.
Life
Moolman was born in 1965 in a working-class suburb of Pietermaritzburg.[2][3][4][5] He holds a Masters degree in English, an Honours degree in Drama Studies, and a PhD, all from the University of KwaZulu-Natal in Durban.[2][6]
He worked as an English teacher, a sub-editor on The Natal Witness,[2][7] and as head of the Education Department at the Tatham Art Gallery in Pietermaritzburg.[2]
He then taught creative writing at the University of KwaZulu-Natal for twelve years.[8] In 2019, he became Associate Professor of Creative Writing and the coordinator of the Creative Writing programme in the English department at the University of the Western Cape.[6]
Moolman was born with Spina bifida and since 2010 his work has increasingly focused on disability and the non-normative body.[9][10][11][12][13]
He lives with his wife in Riebeek West.[4][5]
Writing career
Poetry
Moolman's debut poetry collection, Time like Stone, was published in 2000 and won the Ingrid Jonker Prize for a debut collection in 2001.[2]
His 2007 collection, Separating the Seas, won a South African Literary Award in 2010.[14]
In 2010, he published the collection Light and After. Published in the same year as Tilling the Soil, his anthology of work by South African writers living with disabilities, Light and After is his first collection to directly address his own spina bifida, and the relationship between the body and experimental poetics which would become central to his later work.[15][4]
His next collection, Left Over, continues his examination of embodiment and living with spina bifida, as well as questions of self and nation during and after apartheid.[16] It was shortlisted for the Glenna Luschei Prize for African Poetry.[16]
In 2013, he won the Sol Plaatje European Union Poetry Award for his poem "Daily Duty".[17]
His 2014 collection, A Book of Rooms, won the Glenna Luschei Prize for African Poetry.[18][19][20] The collection examines Moolman's personal experience of growing up as a white South African during apartheid, and of living with Spina bifida.[9][21][13]
Moolman's subsequent work has continued to address disability and the non-normative body.[22][23][10]
Drama
Moolman has written plays for radio and for stage. He won a BBC African Radio Theatre Award in 1987 and the Macmillan Southern African Playwriting Award in 1991.[2] In 2000, he won a Rewards for Playwrights Initiative prize for his plays Missing, Presumed Dead and Miss Dolly.[1]
In 2003, Moolman's play Soldier Boy was the runner-up in the BBC African Performance radio drama competition and was broadcast on the BBC World Service in April that year.[24][2][8]
The script for his stage play, Full Circle, won the jury prize at the 2004 PANSA Festival for New Writing.[8][25] The play premiered at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown in 2005 and was later staged in Pietermaritzburg and Johannesburg, and as part of the Southern African theatre season at the Oval House Theatre in London in 2006.[2][26]
In 2007, his play Stone Angels was awarded joint first prize in the PANSA Festival.[8][27] The play premiered at the 2008 National Arts Festival in Grahamstown and was subsequently performed at the Square Space Theatre in Durban.[2]
Other
Moolman was the founding editor of poetry journal Fidelities, and edited the journal from 1995 until 2007.[8] He also edited poetry titles for the University of KwaZulu-Natal Press from 2000 to 2009.[2]
In 2010, he edited Tilling the Hard Soil, an anthology of work by South African writers living with disabilities, published by the University of KwaZulu-Natal Press.[2]
In 2017, he published his first collection of short stories, The Swimming Lesson and Other Stories.[28]
Published works
Poetry
- Time like Stone (2000)
- Feet of the Sky (2003)
- Separating the Seas (2007)
- Anatomy (2008)
- Light and After (2010)
- Left Over (2013)
- A Book of Rooms (2014)
- All and Everything (2019)
- The Mountain behind the House (2020)
- Fall Risk (2024)
Story collections
- The Swimming Lesson and Other Stories (2017)
Radio plays
- Blind Voices (2007)
Stage plays
- Full Circle (2003)
- Stone Angels (2007)
Edited collections
- Tilling the Hard Soil: Poetry and Prose by South African Writers Living with Disabilities (2010)
- Cutting Carrots the Wrong Way (2017)
- Notes from the Body: Health, Illness, Trauma with Duncan Brown and Nkosinathi Sithole (2023)
References
- ^ a b "Kobus Moolman". Encyclopaedia of South African Theatre and Performance. Retrieved 18 February 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Kobus Moolman". South African Literary Awards. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ "Kobus Moolman". Taking Liberties. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ a b c Okoro, Dike (January–February 2022). "The Art of Poetry: A Conversation with Kobus Moolman". Eclectica. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ a b "Fall Risk Kobus Moolman". uHlanga. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ a b "Department of English People". www.uwc.ac.za. Retrieved 19 October 2022.
- ^ "Kobus Moolman". Literary Tourism. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ a b c d e "Kobus Moolman". African Writing Online. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ a b "Moolman honored by African Poetry Book Fund". University of Nebraska-Lincoln. 21 January 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ a b Moolman, Kobus. "REMEMBERING THE BODY: An Exploration of the Centrality of Embodiment in My Own Work and Other South African Poets". Word Gathering. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ Moolman, Kobus. "Spina Bifida Poems: The Foot". URevolution. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ Moolman, Kobus (August 2018). "'Whose Body is it, and What is it Doing on My Page?' The Intersections between the Non-Normative Body and Alternative Textual Practices". English in Africa. 45 (2).
- ^ a b Jennings, Karen (2019). "Behind the wall in Kobus Moolman's A Book of Rooms". Tydskrif vir Letterkunde. 56 (2).
- ^ "Kobus Moolman wins SALA". Literary Tourism. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ "The language of getting on with life". The Witness. 21 July 2010. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ a b "Luschei Prize Finalist Feature: Kobus Moolman, Left Over". African Poetry Book Fund. 11 November 2014. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ "Kobus Moolman wins Sol Plaatje award". artSMart. 21 October 2013. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ Oduku, Richard Oduor (19 August 2016). "A Poet That More People Should Know: A Review of A Book of Rooms by Kobus Moolman". Wawa Book Review. Retrieved 15 February 2025.
- ^ "South Africa's Kobus Moolman Wins 2015 Glenna Luschei Prize for A Book of Rooms". African Poetry Book Fund. 18 January 2016. Retrieved 15 February 2025.
- ^ "PEN SA Member Kobus Moolman Wins 2015 Glenna Luschei Prize for African Poetry". PEN South Africa. 19 January 2016. Retrieved 15 February 2025.
- ^ Ferris, Jim. "Book Review: The Book of Rooms (Kobus Moolman)". Word Gathering. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ Mogami, Gaamangwe (3 February 2017). "The Poetry of Embodiment: A Dialogue with Kobus Moolman". Africa in Dialogue. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ Moolman, Kobus (2022). "Fourteen Critical Questions". Review of Disability Studies. 18 (1 and 2).
- ^ "African Performance". BBC World Service. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ "Full Circle". Encyclopaedia of South African Theatre and Performance. Retrieved 18 February 2025.
- ^ Brown, Peter. "Full Circle". London Theatre. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ "Kobus Moolman Interview". Wordgathering. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
- ^ "The Swimming Lesson and Other Stories by Kobus Moolman". PEN South Africa. 20 April 2017. Retrieved 19 February 2025.
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