The Bank Windhoek Doek Literary Awards—first announced in April, 2021—recognise Namibian writers, poets, and visual artists who produce resonant works of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and visual art. Published in Doek! Literary Magazine, these literary artists add their unique voices to the country’s emerging literary community. The Awards, sponsored by Bank Windhoek, seek to recognise their literary talent and amplify their works to new audiences at home and abroad.
After an awards season that produced an eagerly anticipated longlist which showcased the diversity of storytelling in Namibia, and a competitive shortlist which curated some of the most widely read pieces of literature in Doek!, the 2021 judges selected the four inaugural winners of the Bank Windhoek Doek Literary Awards.
The winners are:
FICTION
Ndawedwa Denga Hanghuwo
for “Silhouette”
published in Issue 5: March, 2021
“This year’s shortlist bristled with stories with Namibian flavours—writing which cleverly incorporated the country’s indigenous languages, its landscapes, and its familiar social settings. One short story explored sibling closeness in the face of secret loss, another traced parental absence through the eye of a child who writes letters to a mother who never responds, and the last one takes place in a setting that is quite familiar to Namibians, Africans, and readers around the world—the global pandemic and its devastating effects. With shifting perspectives “Silhouette” showcases Ndawedwa Denga Hanghuwo’s confidence and compelling voice; the twist in this wonderful short story is a bonus that exhibits his writing acumen and willingness to push beyond the boundaries of the ordinary and it is our selection for 2021.” — 2021 Bank Windhoek Doek Literary Awards Judges
Ndawedwa Denga Hanghuwo is a Namibian writer. He is also a student at the Namibia University of Science and Technology pursuing a degree in English Literature.
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NONFICTION
Natasha Uys
for “Ouma Sofie’s Gold”
published in Issue 6: July, 2021
“An auralgraph curating the sounds and memories of Windhoek city life, a narration of heritage and departure involving a postdoctoral degree, and a memoir of secret family histories, motherhood, and mental health and illness—the nonfiction shortlisted presented us with writing dealing with complex themes of identity and memory. Our discussions were fierce and our deliberations were long. Natasha Uys’s “Ouma Sophie’s Gold”—a poignant and exemplary piece of nonfiction writing was our selection. Uys’s writing was so heartbreaking we wished the painful truths shared in her work was fictitious—but they are not, they are painfully real and dare us not to look away. Thanks to Uys’s considerable skill at writing, we could not.” — 2021 Bank Windhoek Doek Literary Awards Judges
Natasha Uys is a journalist and editor from Windhoek, Namibia. She is currently studying Media Management through the Sol Plaatje Institute at Rhodes University.
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POETRY
Pauline Buhle Ndhlovu
for “Green And Greening”
published in Issue 4: November, 2020
“The poetry section was difficult to judge because individual interpretations of the shortlisted works led each judge to a separate conclusions about potential winners. However, we decided that the pandemic—its disruptive effects on all our lives—found resonant poetic articulation in Pauline Buhle Ndhlovu’s “Green And Greening.” She made us relive the confinement and desperation of that first lockdown in Namibia—a period which did not seem to have an end. Now, with the country and the world opening up and trying to find a new sense of movement and freedom, her words remind us that we, too, are living things.” — 2021 Bank Windhoek Doek Literary Awards Judges
Pauline Buhle Ndhlovu is a Zimbabwean-born Namibian curator and writer whose work explores the themes of land, memory, healing, time, and senescence. She is drawn to visual anthropology as a form of memory-making. Pauline has a degree in anthropology and works in the culture and development sector.
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VISUAL ART
Namafu Amutse
for “Chrysalis”
published in Issue 4: November, 2020
“Doek! Literary Magazine has had a splendid track record of publishing transportive visual arts in the field of illustration and photography. The shortlisted visual artists presented us with visions of homecoming and finding one’s feet, reaching for the short and long space between, and fragments of change and becoming. Each entry showed a high level of skill and we look forward to the future works these talented artistic visionaries will produce. For 2021, Namafu Amutse’s “Chrysalis” was a captivating exploration of emergence. Hinting at the possibilities that change presents, her work was both sweeping and metamorphic—a vision of things, people, time, places, and worlds beyond this one.” — 2021 Bank Windhoek Doek Literary Awards Judges
Namafu Amutse is filmmaker, photographer, art director, and writer from Swakopmund, Namibia. She is currently pursuing a Bachelors of Education Honours degree in English and German at the University of Namibia (UNAM). Her work is fuelled by Southern African tradition, feminism, and Afrofuturism. She also wrote and directed her short film ‘Mukumo’, which premiered in July, 2020 at the National Theatre of Namibia.
Congratulations to all of the inaugural winners of the Bank Windhoek Doek Literary Awards.
The fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and visual arts winners are awarded NAD5000 each from Bank Windhoek, the official sponsor of the Doek Literary Awards. They also receive a unique trophy designed by Attila Giersch, an award-winning Namibian jeweller.
In addition to this, they each receive a custom-made leather book jacket from Leon Engelbrecht Design. The fiction and nonfiction winners each receive NAD2500 vouchers from Gondwana and Namibia Wildlife Resorts respectively.
Each shortlisted writer receives an NAD1000 book voucher from the Book Den generously sponsored by AdForce, a bottle of Guardian Peak wine provided by Namibia Wine Merchants, a bottle Desolate Gin from Copper & Coal Distillery, and a hamper from Namibia Dairies.
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THE AWARDS