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This paper sets out to analyse the concept of what I shall term an “insider Whiteness,” at once African and inevitably always already out of Africa. Specifically I explore life writing narratives by White Africans as a rich setting for an analysis of how White people both relate to the continent as a physical and imaginary space and negotiate their ability to call Africa “home.” Through detailed textual analysis of Rian Malan's My Traitor's Heart (1990) and reference to a number of works by J. M. Coetzee, Gillian Slovo, Breyten Breytenbach and Doris Lessing, the paper proposes that the continuing debates about identity and race in post-Apartheid South Africa show that it takes a great deal of work for the White person truly to belong in Africa.
June 2007: Tony Simoes da Silva teaches in the School of Humanities, James Cook University. Between 2000 and 2005 he was at the University of Exeter, United Kingdom and he has taught also at the University of Western Australia and Edith Cowan University, both in Perth, Australia. His research spans Anglophone and Lusophone postcolonial writing and theory; contemporary writing in English more generally; postcolonial life writing and critical theories.