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/ 18 October 2002
The latest work by Turner Prize-winning artist Steve McQueen focuses on SA’s mines, writes Adrian Searle.
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/ 18 October 2002
<b>Movie of the week:</b> LaBute’s <i>Possession</i> is not as rich a dish as Byatt’s, but neither is it fast food, writes Shaun de Waal.
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/ 18 October 2002
A literary storm has broken in Spain, where Camilo Jose Cela, winner of the 1989 Nobel Prize for Literature, has been accused of regularly using ghostwriters for most of his career, writes Giles Tremlett.
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/ 18 October 2002
<i>Peace Angel</i> can be found in five locales in the United States, in Russia, Bosnia, Mexico, Israel, Vietnam, India, China and Iraq, writes Matthew Krouse.
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/ 18 October 2002
Kobus! have become the unsuspecting yet willing ambassadors of the Afrikaans renaissance in music, writes Jason Curtis.
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/ 18 October 2002
Award-winning author Zakes Mda has published a new novel. He spoke to Nicole Temkin.
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/ 18 October 2002
<b>Review: </b><i>Ted Hughes: the Life of a Poet</i>
by Elaine Feinstein
(Orion)
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/ 18 October 2002
On the afternoon of June 3 1998, I spent a few hours in the company of an extraordinary man. It was the first and only time I met him. Listening to him speak I became aware of a formidable mind with access to wide experience.
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/ 18 October 2002
The career of former Rhodesian prime minister Sir Garfield Todd who died on Sunday, aged 94, spanned half a century of dramatic change in Central Africa. Todd, who was described variously as a flamboyant autocrat, a dangerous liberal and the nation’s conscience.