Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- A note on terms and languages
- Map
- Introduction: Revisiting the life and scholarship of Dorothea Bleek
- 1 Colonial childhood, European learning
- 2 Tracing rock art in the field with Helen Tongue, 1905–1907
- 3 Return to the Kalahari, July–August 1913
- 4 Ambiguities of interaction: South West Africa, Angola and Tanganyika, 1920–1930
- 5 Testimony of the rocks: A ‘cave journey’, 1928–1932
- 6 Intimacy and marginality in rock art recording, 1932–1940
- 7 Making the bushman dictionary, 1934–1956
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- A note on terms and languages
- Map
- Introduction: Revisiting the life and scholarship of Dorothea Bleek
- 1 Colonial childhood, European learning
- 2 Tracing rock art in the field with Helen Tongue, 1905–1907
- 3 Return to the Kalahari, July–August 1913
- 4 Ambiguities of interaction: South West Africa, Angola and Tanganyika, 1920–1930
- 5 Testimony of the rocks: A ‘cave journey’, 1928–1932
- 6 Intimacy and marginality in rock art recording, 1932–1940
- 7 Making the bushman dictionary, 1934–1956
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The notebooks and associated papers collected in the 1870s and beyond by Lucy Lloyd and Wilhelm Bleek are inscribed in UNESCO's Memory of the World register. Since 1997, the Bleek Collection has been recognised as a documentary heritage of international significance. The landmark 1991 conference in Cape Town, the proceedings of which were published as Voices from the Past: /Xam Bushmen and the Bleek and Lloyd Collection, edited by Janette Deacon and Thomas Dowson, introduced an era of sustained cross-disciplinary interest in this unique collection of material that is most often described as ethnographic. Many academic and popular books, exhibitions and performances have since been created using the Bleek Collection and the interactions between Bleek, Lloyd and their prisoner interlocutors as reference and inspiration.
But my engagement with the collection pre-dated all that. It began in the early 1990s, when, as a reporter for one of Cape Town's daily newspapers, I interviewed Pippa Skotnes about her critically acclaimed art book Sound from the Thinking Strings. In that work, Pippa explored the final years of /Xam life and paid homage to the words of //Kabbo and to bushman cosmology through a series of etchings drawn from rock art motifs. The artworks were presented alongside contributions from Pippa's colleagues at the University of Cape Town (UCT), including poetry by Stephen Watson that drew on the /Xam notebooks and essays by archaeologist John Parkington and historian Nigel Penn.
I did not know then that my interest in the collection and the drama of its making would keep me busy for many years. While working on my MPhil at UCT in the early 2000s, I researched the story of Otto Hartung Spohr and discovered how his dedicated detective work and roots in pre-World War II Germany and Eastern Europe had played out in his study of German librarians at the Cape and of German Africana, and in his writings on the life of Wilhelm Bleek.
While employed as a librarian at UCT, Spohr travelled to archives in Germany in the 1960s and crossed the Iron Curtain while on the trail of material pertaining to Wilhelm Bleek. His obsession, described as ‘some sort of madness’, added much of the personal detail now taken for granted in the Bleek Collection, including the courtship letters between Wilhelm and his future wife, Jemima.
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- Dorothea BleekA life of scholarship, pp. vii - xPublisher: Wits University PressPrint publication year: 2016