Making a prison narrative personal: Jonny Steinberg, the gangster and the reader

In his second book, The Number, literary journalist Jonny Steinberg examines prison gangs in a bid to understand the violence which has engulfed post-apartheid South Africa. Steinberg seldom conducts a straightforward relationship with his primary sources/characters and in this book he repeatedly la...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journalism (London, England) England), 2014-07, Vol.15 (5), p.605-614
1. Verfasser: Rennie, Gillian
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In his second book, The Number, literary journalist Jonny Steinberg examines prison gangs in a bid to understand the violence which has engulfed post-apartheid South Africa. Steinberg seldom conducts a straightforward relationship with his primary sources/characters and in this book he repeatedly lays on the page a doubtfulness that is personal and professional – narrative acts which, in a genre fundamentally about relationships between people, incur ethical consequences. This article seeks to tease out some of the issues raised by Steinberg’s construction of himself as a reliable narrator in The Number, a work of literary journalism in book form but which features a confessional mode made familiar more recently by digital platforms. This has a particularly South African resonance: the dominant post-apartheid understanding of personal narrative harks back to testimony offered and received at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. As such, it becomes difficult to locate the subject of the narrative.
ISSN:1464-8849
1741-3001
DOI:10.1177/1464884914523095