Koleka Putuma is a South African queer poet and theatre-maker. She was nominated one of Okay Africa's most influential women in 2019.
Biography
Putuma was born in Port Elizabeth, South Africa in 1993. She studied for a BA in Theatre and Performance at the University of Cape Town. In 2016 she was awarded the PEN student writing prize for her poem 'Water'. This poem is used in schools as a reminder that access to water is political, historical and racialized. Recurrent themes in Putuma's work are love, queerness, decolonial struggle and the legacy of apartheid, as well as the intersection of patriarchy with those ideas and identities. She works as a theatre producer for Design Indaba and lives in Cape Town.
''Collective Amnesia''
Putuma first came to global attention with the publication of her poetry collectionCollective Amnesia in 2017. The Johannesburg Review of Books hailed Putuma as a "genius". It was released with complementary photography by Cape Town-based photographer Andy Mkosi. Within three months of its release the book sold 2000 copies, had 17 launches across South Africa and was on the syllabus at two universities. After eight months it had sold over 5000 copies and Putuma had given performances of it across three continents. It was translated to Spanish by Lawrence Schimel and Arrate Hidalgo and was published in 2019. Its Danish translation is due to be published in 2020. As of 2018, Putuma is the best-selling poet in South African history. Collective Amnesia is notable for its repeated use of the wordwomxn, which explicitly includes trans women and women of colour.
Reception
Collective Amnesia has quickly become a key text to understanding postcolonial South Africa, particularly with its focus on black women's bodies and queer identities. Haith argues that the collection is as much a 'cultural object' of contemporary South Africa, as it is a text. Burger's critique places Putuma's use of the water as a literary device within the context of other South African poets, such as Ronelda S Kamfer. The poem 'Water' ha become a key text for literary explorations of hydrocolonialism. Pieterse emphasises Putuma's writing about black womxnhood, alongside the poet Sindiswa Busuku-Mathese. Whilst it was Putuma's poetry that brought her to a global stage, her work for stage has also been received to critical acclaim, dealing with contemporary political issues. Her recent play No Easter Sunday for Queers brought attention to the violent discrimination that lesbians in South Africa can face. Mbuzeni deals with the orphan crisis and is narrated by five young women, who whilst they play joke about death. Boehmer considers Putuma within a broader canon of postcolonial poetry and short-story writing, which can feel for the reader like a "call to action".
Works
Plays
SCOOP: kitchen play for carers and babes- the first South African play designed for babies up to 12 months old, with Magnet Theatre
Ekhaya - written for 2-7 year olds
UHM
Woza Sarafina
Mbuzeni’
No Easter Sunday for Queers - a drama about religion and queerness based on one of Putuma's poems.