“When one reads Clingman's memoir, with the thoroughly appropriate title, Birthmark, it soon becomes evident that this leading academic, like J. M. Coetzee, has an exceptional gift for making the most of the memoir as genre.”—Netwerk24
“Stephen Clingman, the acclaimed critic and biographer, has turned his acute eye and limpid prose to a subject much nearer at hand—his own coming of age in the final decades of apartheid. In mid-century Johannesburg, ‘born into light, the most beautiful soft and bright sunlight of the most beautiful place on earth,’ Clingman ponders mysteries of identity, origin, migration, vision, visibility—how one sees and is seen—attempting answers to perennial, hard questions.”—African Studies Review
“Birthmark is a profound reflection on vision and identity. Clingman examines his own perspectives and their origins. How did I come to see this way? How does this way of seeing shape the person I am? Can it be changed?”—Ivan Vladislavic, author of Portrait with Keys: The City of Johannesburg Unlocked and winner of the Windham Campbell Award
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