Alba Bouwer Explained

Alba Bouwer
Birth Date:1920 3, df=yes
Birth Place:Vredefort district, Free State, South Africa
Death Place:Helderberg Village, Somerset West, Western Cape, South Africa
Occupation:Journalist
Genre:Children's literature
Subject:girlhood; old age; rural life
Spouse:Hubert Coetzee (d. 1969), Jan Hofmeyr

Albertha Magdalena Bouwer (16 March 1920 – 5 October 2010) was a South African Afrikaans-writing journalist and author. She is best known for her series of children's stories about the experiences of a small girl called Alie growing up in the fictional location Rivierplaas in rural Free State.[1] Late in life she published a novel for adults, Die afdraand van die dag is kil (The close of the day is cold, 1992), about two women in old age.[2]

Life

Alba Bouwer was herself brought up on a farm in the Free State, and attended La Rochelle Girls' High School in Paarl, and Huguenot University College in Wellington. Most of her professional life was spent in literary and media circles in and around Cape Town.

Immediately after graduation Bouwer began work as a school teacher, but she left teaching to become editor of Huishouding, a newly established women's magazine. From 1948 to 1950 she was a radio producer and presenter in the children's service of the South African Broadcasting Corporation, resigning in 1950 to take up an assistant editorship at the newly founded women's magazine Sarie, where she remained for thirteen years.

Her first and best known work of fiction, Stories van Rivierplaas, originally appeared in serialised form in Sarie. Like many of her stories, these were semi-autobiographical. She continued to produce stories, translations and compilations into the late 1980s, but gave up her career in journalism upon marriage in 1963.

Bouwer's first husband was Hubert Coetzee (died 1969), a widower with two teenaged children from his previous marriage. Care for her stepchildren became Bouwer's first priority as wife and as widow. In 1975 she remarried with Jan Hendrik Hofmeyr, a widower with five children from his previous marriage, and moved from the Boland to Riversdale.

Death

Since 1994 she lived in a retirement resort in Somerset West.[3] On 5 October 2010 Alba Bouwer fell into a coma and died.[4]

Awards and honours

Alba Bouwer was awarded the Scheepers Prize for Children's Literature in 1959 and again in 1965, and the C.P. Hoogenhout Award in 1961, 1971 and 1983.[5]

Since 1989 the South African Academy of Science and Arts has presented a triennial Alba Bouwer Prize for children's literature, named in her honour.[6]

Publications

As author

Reissued 2007 under the title Rivierplaas: Stories van Rivierplaas, Nuwe Stories van Rivierplaas, Stories van Ruyswyck.

As editor/compiler

As translator

Reissued 2007. .

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Elwyn Jenkins, "The Growth of a National Children's Literature in English", English Academy Review 18:1 (2001), p. 148.
  2. Reviewed by Fred J. Nichols in World Literature Today 68:1 (1994), p. 196.
  3. Biographical details from Die blink uur van mooi dinge, pp. 6–74.
  4. Web site: Skrywer Bouwer sterf ná koma: Beeld: Suid-Afrika: Nuus . 9 October 2010 . 24 November 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20101124092059/http://www.beeld.com/Suid-Afrika/Nuus/Skrywer-Bouwer-sterf-na-koma-20101007 . dead .
  5. http://www.childlit.org.za/outabouwer.html Details on awards to Alba Bouwer
  6. http://www.storiewerf.co.za/lyste/albabouwerprys.htm List of recipients of the Alba Bouwer Prize
  7. Cited in Annemarié van Niekerk, "A Woman Who Made Her Markin History but Remained Marginalised in the Documents of History: Petronella van Heerden", Journal of Literary Studies 14:3 (1998), pp. 348–374. Available online. Accessed 26 January 2008.