Peter Abrahams in the Modern African World
Ntongela Masilela
Abstract
Peter Abrahams was a major New African intellectual of the New African Movement.
The New African Movement was a particular historical eventuation consisting of
intellectuals, writers, musicians, political leaders and religious figures who – between the
years 1904 and 1960 – constructed a singular form of modernity in South Africa known
as “New African modernity.†One of the strongest outside forces influencing the
construction of New African modernity was New Negro modernity in the United States.
A singular achievement of Peter Abrahams was to have imported to South Africa the
literary modernism of the Harlem Renaissance. This was done through his novels, short
stories and poems. When he went into exile in 1939 at the age of twenty, he navigated
black cosmopolitanism through the philosophy of Pan-Africanism, which was the
quintessential ideology of black modernism across the first half of the twentieth century.
Go to AJOL for full-text access.