Mark Behr

Mark Behr (19 October 1963 – 27 November 2015) was a Tanzanian born writer who grew up in South Africa. He was professor of English Literature and Creative Writing at Rhodes College, Memphis, Tennessee. He also taught in the MA program at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Early life

Behr was born into a family of farmers in the district of Oljorro, Arusha, Tanzania, then still Tanganyika. After the nationalisation of white-owned farms during the implementation of President Julius Nyerere's Ujamaa Policy of African Socialism in 1964, the family emigrated to South Africa. Here the family defined themselves as Afrikaners, with the Behr children attending Afrikaans language schools and the conservative Dutch Reformed church.[1]

Behr's father became a game ranger in the game parks of KwaZulu-Natal, where Behr spent his early youth. Between ages ten and twelve Behr attended the Drakensberg Boys' Choir School, a private music academy in the Drakensberg Mountains of KwaZulu-Natal. After matriculation from Port Natal High School, an Afrikaans language school in Durban, he was, like most other young white South African men of his age, conscripted into the South African Defence Force, and he served in the Angolan War, becoming a junior officer in the Marine Corps.

Behr died on 27 November 2015 in Johannesburg after a suspected heart attack.[2][3]

Novels

Mark Behr's three novels are:

He has published novels, short stories and essays. His work is often concerned with issues of violence, racism, nationalism, militarisation, masculinity and colonialism. Behr's work is extensively translated and has received awards from the Los Angeles Times, the United Kingdom British Society of Authors, and the Academy of Science of South Africa. He travels regularly between the United States and South Africa.

Academic study and political development

After leaving the South African Defence Force, Behr attended Stellenbosch University in the Western-Cape Province of South Africa. It was during this period (1985–1989) that Behr's creative work was first published several poems appeared in the university's annual magazine, "Die Stellenbosse Student". While a student there, Behr became an agent for the South African apartheid government, which was committed to monitoring the activities of students on university campuses to prevent political insurrection.[11]

Having graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree with majors in English and Politics. Behr proceeded to read for an Honors degree in Politics. After a year with IDASA (the Institute for a Democratic Alternative for South Africa) Behr became a Research Fellow and lecturer at the International Peace Research Institute in Oslo, Norway, and began to travel between Europe, South Africa, and the United States. He enrolled at the University of Notre Dame in the United States where he studied with Joseph Buttigieg, the translator of Antonio Gramsci's Prison Notebooks. Behr graduated from Notre Dame with Master's degrees in International Peace Studies in 1993, Fiction Writing in 1998, and English Literature in 2000.

Writing awards

Behr's first published novel, The Smell of Apples (1995), appeared first in Afrikaans in 1993 (as Die Reuk van Appels). The book garnered significant recognition in the form of the M-Net Award, one of South Africa's most prestigious literary prizes, as well as the Eugene Marais and the CNA Debut Literary Awards in South Africa, and the Betty Trask Award for the best first novel published in the United Kingdom in 1996. The novel was also short-listed for both the Steinbeck and Guardian Literary Awards. In 1997 the novel received the Art Seidenbaum Award from the Los Angeles Times.

The attention attracted by the success of this book compelled Behr to speak publicly about his spying. In 1996, at a Cape Town conference on Truth and Reconciliation, he used his podium as keynote speaker to discuss his history in the South African military and his campus spy status. In 2000, Behr's second novel, Embrace, was published. Its mixed reviews may reflect enduring anxieties regarding Behr's student political activities. Praised by Felice Picano in the Gay and Lesbian Review Worldwide for its epic quality, universal reach and insistence on complexity it was reviled in The Sunday Times by Tim Trengrove Jones as a "baggy monster of overstated anxiety." Embrace was short-listed for The Sunday Times Award in South Africa and the Encore Award in the United Kingdom. At the end of 2009 Behr published his third novel Kings of the Water. Kate Saunders in The Times reviewed it as : "Superbly written, thoughtful and unflinching, this terrific novel explores the mentality of the Afrikaner male – with wonderfully poetic use of the Afrikaans language." Novelist Christopher Hope, reviewing for The Guardian (January 2010), noted the spirit of Chekov's "The Cherry Orchard" and called the novel "one of the most moving to come out of South Africa in many years."

Behr has also written short stories and essays.[12][13] The short story "Die Boer en die Swaan" (The Boer and the Swan) appeared in Die Suid-Afrikaan, November 1993. "Cape Town, My Love" appeared in 2006 in Cape Town: A City Imagined, edited by Steven Watson (Penguin). Also in 2006, “Socrates, Miss Celie and Me” was published in Gesprek Sonder Grense: Johan Degenaar Word 80. In Spring 2007, the journal The Truth About the Fact published "People Like Us," which is an extract from a lecture Behr gave at Wilfrid Laurier University in Canada in 2003. "A Tale of Two Towers: Language, Terrorism and Another Moment in History.” During 2009 the short short-story "Boy" was published in the international anthology Between Men Two. This story is Behr's response to the short story "Girl" by Jamaica Kincaid. In Fifty Gay and Lesbian Books Everyone Must Read, Behr looks at the impact of Alice Walker's The Color Purple on his own political and psychological development. Behr's work has, to date, been published in ten languages.

Themes and influences

Identity construction through the impact of language, nationalism, gender, and militarisation are consistent themes in Behr's works.[14][15][16] This is similar to other South African writers of his generation, like Damon Galgut and Marlene van Niekerk. Biographical experience and Behr's identification as gay/queer appear to have strongly influenced the content and nature of his work.[17] He has written of the early influence of The Color Purple by Alice Walker. Traces of other influence may be found in the work of South African poets Breyten Breytenbach and Antjie Krog. Key theoretical influences in Behr's writing may come from selected texts of Antonio Gramsci, Judith Butler and Richard Rorty.

References

  1. Vliesa, Andrew van der. "An Interview with Mark Behr", Safundi: The Journal of South African and American Studies, Volume 12, Issue 1, 2011, pages 1-26, 13 January 2011. Retrieved on 7 September 2014.
  2. Staff Reporter (29 November 2015). "‘Smell of Apples’ author Behr dies". Sunday Times. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
  3. Jennifer (28 November 2015). "RIP Mark Behr (1963 – 2015)". Books Live. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
  4. Lesher, Linda Parent (2000). The Best Novels of the Nineties: A Readers Guide. McFarland. p. 161. ISBN 9780786407422. Retrieved 14 September 2011.
  5. Simon, Catherine. "L'Odeur des pommes, de Mark Behr et Le Corps rebelle d'Abigail Tansi, de Chris Abani : jeunesses africaines à corps perdus", Le Monde, Paris, 1 April 2010. Retrieved on 7 September 2014.
  6. Evans, David. "Kings of the Water, By Mark Behr" The Independent, London, 12 September 2010. Retrieved on 7 September 2014.
  7. Hope, Christopher. "Kings of the Water by Mark Behr", The Guardian, London, 23 January 2010. Retrieved on 7 September 2014.
  8. Stolzmann, Uwe. "Ein Knoten in der Seele", Neue Zürcher Zeitung, Zürich, 17 October 2012. Retrieved on 7 September 2014.
  9. Crocker, Jennifer. "Paradys found", Times Live, Johannesburg, 27 February 2010. Retrieved on 7 September 2014.
  10. Simon, Catherine. "Retour au veld natal. Les Rois du Paradis, de Mark Behr", Le Monde, Paris, 08 March 2013. Retrieved on 7 September 2014.
  11. "That lingering odour". nicborain. Retrieved 1 March 2013.
  12. "Rhodes Professor Mark Behr Pays Tribute to Legacy of Nelson Mandela", Rhodes College News, 10 December 2013. Retrieved on 7 September 2014.
  13. Behr, Mark. "Nelson Mandela, une ligne morale", Le Monde, Paris, 7 December 2013. Retrieved on 7 September 2014.
  14. Stobie, Cheryl. "Fissures in Apartheid's 'Eden': Representations of Sexuality in The Smell of Apples by Mark Behr", Research in African Literatures, Vol. 39, No. 1, Spring, 2008. Retrieved on 6 September 2014.
  15. Barnard, Rita. "The Smell of Apples, Moby-Dick, and Apartheid Ideology", Modern Fiction Studies, Volume 46, Number 1, Spring 2000, pp. 207-226. Retrieved on 6 September 2014.
  16. Reef, Anne. "Try These: Tackling Representations of Rugby in Recent South African Novels", English Academy Review: Southern African Journal of English Studies, Volume 27, Issue 2, 2010. Retrieved on 6 September 2014.
  17. Zabus, Chantal "Out in Africa: Same-Sex Desire in Sub-Saharan Literatures and Cultures", James Currey, 2013. Retrieved on 7 September 2014.

External links

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