By Dan Wylie
Shaka Zulu is one of the most famous figures in South African history, even though not much is actually known about him.
The subject of a hit 1980s TV show and of many books, Shaka is reframed by each generation.
Now he’s back in popular culture with a major new South African TV series, ‘Shaka iLembe’.
Dan Wylie is an English professor who has written numerous research papers and two academic books on Shaka. We asked him four questions.
Who was Shaka Zulu and what did you learn from writing about him?
Shaka kaSenzangakhona is universally recognised as the founder of what would become known as the “Zulu nation”.
He ruled from about 1817 until he was assassinated by his half-brothers in 1828. He’s credited with elevating the Zulu from a fairly insignificant group, one among others, to a more unified “state”.
Shaka conquered, incorporated, or allied with neighbours such as the Mthethwa, Ndwandwe, Hlubi, Qwabe and Mkhize to dominate a 200km-wide area north of the present-day city of Durban.
In my view, the unity of this state, the level of violence employed to achieve it, and Shaka’s responsibility for knock-on violence further inland have been hugely exaggerated.
I began writing a PhD study of the numerous white images of Shaka. These ranged from the earliest monstrous depictions of the mid-1800s, through sundry novels, poems and illustrations to the notoriously ahistorical 1986 TV series Shaka Zulu (in which African spirituality is reduced to screeching Gothic light shows and Shaka is a snarling killing machine).
My study was published as Savage Delight, an investigation of how long-entrenched European images of “savagery” were applied to Shaka to support the ideologies of colonisation and apartheid.
This over-simplified stereotype of Africans being prone to unbridled violence has fed into the ongoing Zulu self-conception as a fundamentally “warrior nation”.
I learned three main things. First, that a great deal of what had passed as factual and accepted “history” was actually pure fiction.
Second, that such inventions were driven by much wider aesthetic, social or political currents – and are difficult to erase from popular consciousness.
And third, that no professional scholar had attempted a full-scale biography of Shaka solidly based on available historical evidence.
Why is he such an enduring figure in popular culture?
Everybody loves a demon who can be blamed for society’s ills; or a hero who can be posed as a role model.
We’re all fascinated by the execution of supreme power. And where solid evidence is lacking, storytellers step in to shape a character to their own ends.
Shaka has proved richly available and malleable. Colonials could use his alleged monstrosity to political advantage; Zulu nationalists could use his alleged military genius to theirs.
Hence such literary works as South African poet Mazisi Kunene’s epic poem Emperor Shaka the Great or Senegalese politician and poet Leopold Sédar Senghor’s play-for-voices Chaka, in which Shaka becomes a symbol of resistance to colonialism for all of Africa and all times.
What myths have shaped his image in popular discourse?
Most can be broadly lumped under “monster” and “heroic genius”.
The first white eyewitnesses were small-scale traders and adventurers Nathaniel Isaacs and Henry Francis Fynn.
Despite being well treated by Shaka, they later colluded to portray him as a demonic mass-murderer to cover their own dodgy activities, stealing ivory, taking local “harems”, smuggling guns and possibly even slaves. Isaacs’ account compares Shaka to the barbarian ruler Attila the Hun, but unsupported by any solid evidence.
This image gelled nicely with pre-existing stereotypes of African savagery.
And it suited colonial invaders to blame the Zulu for depopulating large areas by wiping out other “tribes” far inland, freeing up territory for colonial settlement.
What do you hope a new TV series will contribute historically?
My impression is that producers and publishers are taking greater steps to consult historians.
These include South African illustrator Luke Molver’s more level-headed graphic novels: his 2017 Shaka Rising, for example, includes an appendix noting the historical uncertainties and debates.
‘Shaka iLembe’ has also made efforts to consult historians and to achieve greater authenticity.
In the end, of course, storytelling will prevail over factuality – and in Shaka’s life story there are so many factual gaps or competing versions that a “story” has to be forged. That’s art.
It becomes a question of what the story implies. I’d hope that new treatments dump the dreadful, portentous stereotyping and portray Shaka more realistically.
He was, in my view, neither unrestrained mass-murderer nor superhuman conqueror, but a tough, competent leader who wielded alliances with his neighbours, absorbing people into new structures more than chasing them away. But such intricate politics don’t make for such great TV – or do they?
Shaka iLembe is airing on Mzansi Magic on DStv