Season 9

This episode features M. Neelika Jayawardane, a writer and scholar  whose work is informed by Southern Africa’s history, and by contemporary artists and their visual worlds. Jayawardane speaks to Sky Goodden about her recent Momus feature on artist Gabrielle Goliath’s Elegy (2015–ongoing), a work of collective mourning that became newly resonant amid the attempts to silence it that played out at this year’s Venice Biennale.

Their conversation asks what it means to continue when neither justice nor resolution can be taken for granted. Jayawardane reflects on writing as a form of responsibility—to artists, to readers, and to one’s own experience—and on why some stories demand that the writer step fully into the frame.

Together, Jayawardane and Goodden discuss the unfinished work of repair, the obligations and pleasures of being read, and the unexpected role that lap swimming plays in the writing process. Jayawardane talks about using her voice to survive, and finding language for what cannot be neatly resolved.

Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews.

Thanks to this episode’s sponsor, PHI, for supporting our work.

About the Guest

About the Guest, and more

  • M. Neelika Jayawardane is a writer and scholar. She is Professor of English Literature at a university in the US, and a Senior Research Associate at The Johannesburg Institute for Advanced Study (JIAS). Her research and writing—both creative and scholarly—are informed by Southern Africa’s history, and by the work of contemporary artists and visual worlds. Supported by a grant from the Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers, she is currently working on a book project on Afrapix, a South African photographers’ collective that operated during the last decade of apartheid.

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