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A Soviet Journey: A Critical Annotated Edition. By Alex La Guma. Ed. Christopher Lee. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2017. xviii, 265 pp. Notes. Bibliography. Index. Photographs. Maps. $95.00, hard bound.

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A Soviet Journey: A Critical Annotated Edition. By Alex La Guma. Ed. Christopher Lee. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books, 2017. xviii, 265 pp. Notes. Bibliography. Index. Photographs. Maps. $95.00, hard bound.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2018

Teresa Barnes*
Affiliation:
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 2018 

This is a re-publication of South African novelist Alex La Guma's composite 1978 memoir of several journeys to the Soviet Union in the 1960s and 1970s. La Guma (1925–1985) penned four political novels between 1962 and 1979 about apartheid-era society. Despite the publication of several biographies (most recently Roger Field, Alex La Guma: A Literary and Political Biography [2010]), internationally he remains something of a figure that only the equivalent of a connoisseur of fine wines would know. Aficionados of South African literature might remember that he was a lifelong member of the South African Communist Party and an exiled and active member of the African National Congress, South Africa's main liberation movement. Few will recall that he became the ANC's chief representative to Latin America and that he died and was buried in Cuba.

The book is graced by Professor Christopher Lee's comprehensive introduction to the enduring ties between the Soviet Union and South African freedom struggles, and La Guma's place in this relationship. Indeed, this sixty-page introduction is worth the price of the book. Lee vividly evokes that breathless moment in the mid-twentieth century when a brand new Third World, full of anger, promise, and emancipatory vision was rising out of the ashes of colonialism. As Lee writes, “A Soviet Journey resituates the vital role that the Soviet Union (USSR) held for liberation struggles around the world as a patron, host, and political model—perspectives that have been lost, particularly at a popular level, since the demise of the USSR itself” (3–4).

La Guma belonged to the second generation of African novelists who wrote about people who somehow collectively found the strength to endure colonialism and were trying through sheer force of imagination to make a transition to a new world. Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, Kenya's most eminent novelist of that generation, has contributed a touching foreword to the book in which he tells of meeting La Guma in Sweden when they were hopeful young exiles, taking on the world. La Guma's wife Blanche has also contributed a short foreword evoking that heady time.

In the 1960s and particularly in 1975, La Guma set out to find out how much of that new world was already a-brewing in the USSR. In 1975 he travelled through Soviet Central Asia, particularly interested to find out how ethnic minorities were faring under socialism. As a colored South African (the term given to and used by the country's “mixed-race” population), La Guma was acutely aware that one of the central tasks of a new South Africa, should it ever come, would be to decide the fate of the categories of racial and ethnic divides. Trekking “in the footsteps of Alexander” (83) through Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kirghizstan, and Siberia, La Guma was most interested in the relationships between these far-flung peripheries and Moscow. Based on numerous conversations, meals, tours, and encounters, he concluded that the Soviet policy of decentralization had much to offer to those in search of models that one day could be used to replace apartheid in South Africa.

Hope and optimism permeate the pages of A Soviet Journey. Today, we “know” the fate of the Soviet experiment. But La Guma saw man everywhere successfully overcoming nature and conquering the challenges of industrial and agricultural production. He saw people of different cultures learning to live together. He witnessed a fierce pride in the accomplishments of Soviet culture and society. As a lifelong communist he might well have been looking through rose-colored glasses; but in the USSR he did not see replicas of South Africa's tarpaper shacks, hordes of hungry children, or the indiscriminate use of police dogs and bullets. Instead he met friendly, proud people who insisted on showing him their achievements and on feeding him favored delicacies, which to his increasing dismay, usually turned out to be boiled sheep's head. But there was also very good ice cream on offer! One feels La Guma's delight as he wandered into street bookstalls and found worn copies of his own novels translated into local languages.

For students of the Soviet Union and transnational communism in the Cold War era, La Guma's lively tale provides a valuable perspective on less-travelled Soviet byways, and the ways that officials and ordinary people alike presented themselves and their communities to an honored and enthusiastic African comrade.