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A small publishing company founded by a writer from Lady Frere is drawing attention to a bigger question in the Eastern Cape: can local publishers help more rural writers get their work into books, classrooms and the public?
Nkuthalo Media, started by author Nkuthalo David Tyutulo, was built after years of writing without formal publication. Instead of continuing to rely on traditional publishers, he registered his own company to release his work and expand into media production.
That decision appears to be paying off. According to reports, some of his books are now prescribed at institutions such as Walter Sisulu University and the Cape Peninsula University of Technology. This signals that content produced outside major publishing hubs can still reach national academic spaces.
For many aspiring writers in rural parts of the Eastern Cape, the biggest barrier is access. Traditional publishing often requires connections, funding, and proximity to urban centres like Cape Town or Johannesburg. Tyutulo’s approach suggests an alternative route: building local platforms instead of waiting for entry into established ones.
But whether Nkuthalo Media is currently publishing other writers, beyond Tyutulo’s own work, has not been confirmed.
The impact, however, goes beyond one company. If small publishers like this begin to support multiple writers, it could change how stories from places like Bizana, Lusikisiki, Libode, Mthatha, Port St Johns, Matatiele, and Flagstaff are told — and who gets to tell them. Local languages, rural experiences and community issues could gain more visibility in books, schools and universities.
There are still challenges. Publishing requires funding, editing support, distribution networks and marketing — resources that are often limited in rural areas. Without these, scaling opportunities for other writers may be difficult.
For readers and young writers in Pondoland, the key takeaway is possibility. A local example now exists of someone moving from writing in a notebook to building a publishing business with national reach.
What happens next will determine whether this becomes a wider pathway or remains an individual success story.
Local impact is emerging, but the scale of opportunities for other rural writers has not been confirmed.
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