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Diana Ferrus

South African writer and storyteller (born 1953) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Diana Ferrus (born 29 August 1953, Worcester, South Africa) is a South African writer and storyteller of mixed Khoisan and slave ancestry. Her work is published in Afrikaans and English. Ferrus leads writing workshops in Cape Town while working as an administrator at the University of the Western Cape.[1]

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Ferrus is best known for her poem about Sarah Baartman, a South African woman taken to Europe under false pretenses and paraded as a curiosity.[2] She wrote the poem in 1998 while studying at Utrecht University.[3][4] The popularity of this poem is widely believed to be responsible for the return of Bartmann's remains to South Africa.[5] The poem was published into a French law.[6]

Ferrus is a founder of the Afrikaans Skrywersvereniging (ASV), Bush Poets, and Women in Xchains.[7] She has a publishing company called Diana Ferrus Publishers and has co-edited and published a collection of stories about fathers and daughters.[4]

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