In Losing the Plot, well-known scholar and writer Leon de Kock offers a
lively and wide-ranging analysis of postapartheid South African writing
which, he contends, has morphed into a far more flexible and
multifaceted entity than its predecessor. If postapartheid literature's
founding moment was the 'transition' to democracy, writing over the
ensuing years has viewed the Mandelan project with increasing doubt.
Instead, authors from all quarters are seen to be reporting, in
different ways and from divergent points of view, on what is perceived
to be a pathological public sphere in which the plot - the mapping and
making of social betterment - appears to have been lost. The compulsion
to detect forensically the actual causes of such loss of direction has
resulted in the prominence of creative nonfiction. A significant adjunct
in the rise of this is the new media, which sets up a 'wounded' space
within which a 'cult of commiseration' compulsively and repeatedly plays
out the facts of the day on people's screens. This, De Kock argues, is
reproduced in much postapartheid writing. And, although fictional forms
persist in genres such as crime fiction, with their tendency to
overplot, more serious fiction underplots, yielding to the imprint of
real conditions to determine the narrative construction.