The Greatest Student to Ever Live: An Exaggerated Biography

23 years ago, the world welcomed a young boy into its midst – a boy who would one day become a man (as most, but of course not all, boys have a tendency to do, given the progression of time and whatnot, but not negating gender fluidity and with a deep respect for trans rights). That boy was named Mukhtaar Waja, and is both the subject of this biography, and the author of it. Please, hold your applause.

Me and my Ghostwriter

I’m currently doing an MSc Geography degree at Wits University, researching healthcare practitioner’s perceptions of the relationship between climate and mental health (read: I am so tired). The relationship between climate and mental health is fascinating, and research on this topic has presented quite compelling findings, suggesting that increases in temperature are to blame for increases in hospital admissions for schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, neurotic disorder and mania. Increased hours of sunshine may also adversely impact bipolar disorder and suicide rates, while improving depressive symptoms. However, most of this research uses basic correlation to reach these conclusions and – say it with me – correlation does not equal causation. Mental health is complex, its manifestations influenced by socioeconomic and biological factors that may act independent of climate – and most of the existing research on this topic does not engage with these factors. My research examines how healthcare practitioners perceive this potential relationship, and if they have observed this relationship in the cases they have worked on. I am currently in the data collection phase of my research and, in my humblest of opinions, it is the best research to ever be done in the history of the universe. I’m kidding, it’s been alright; it’s going alright.

It is shocking to say out loud – though less so to type – but I have been at Wits University for five years now. I began my academic journey in 2018, majoring in Geography and Psychology. I had chosen Psychology because it seemed practical and useful, and I chose Geography because I absolutely loved the subject! My aunt was a geography teacher and she had tutored me in the subject all through high school, fostering in me a passion for the subject that teaches us how the Earth – that massive blue marble we call home – functions, with all its intricate systems working perfectly to create an endless cycle of erosion and creation, of destruction and… another word for creation. It’s a cycle we are a part of! A cycle we have actually not been good for. We’re a real problem.

During my second year of university, my aunt passed away, which was less than ideal for everyone involved. I remembered how proud she was that I was continuing with geography into university, and that I was one of the top geography students in my year – an accomplishment I completely owe to her. I owe my position as a Masters student to her. I would never have had the motivation to go this far if she wasn’t in my thoughts – all through Undergrad, all through my Honours year, and still now.

I am excited to venture further into that dark, dangerous world of academia, with all its many degrees, and unending application processes that never seem to work properly and always end up with me being ping ponged around the registration office with Olympic precision. There is so much to be explored in the field of geography, so much still to be understood about the planet we live on – and if anyone’s going to understand it… it probably won’t be me, honestly, but I’m going to try! And all the while, I’ll be blogging that journey – right here, with you, dear reader.

Anyway, with me fast approaching the word limit and you having other commitments to attend to, I bid you farewell. I hope you had a pleasant read, and I just want to say: you’re welcome. It is my greatest pleasure to be your new role model. See you in the next blog!

The Birth of a Blogger

My name is Ijeoma (Ij for short), and I am a PhD Candidate in Political Science at Stellenbosch University under the South African Research Chair (SARCHi) in Gender Politics through the NRF scholarship. To have reached this point in my research journey required a lot of chopping and changing, but the golden thread remained the same – that I needed to write about what tugged at my inner core to answer questions that guided my being. As a young undergrad, I was drawn to International Relations because I was inquisitive about the world around me and the systems that governed the people who decided on them. My favourite subjects were history, social anthropology and metascience, as the questions of why within narratives and histories have always intrigued me. Throughout my journey in academia, I have been involved in extracurricular activities that mirrored it – I was President of the Stellenbosch Political Science Students Association (SPOSSA) in my final year while also being a media spokesperson for the Open Stellenbosch movement in 2015. Those activist spaces and experiences completely deconstructed what I saw as academia and the knowledge production created within institutions. It gave me the confidence to write on issues around me, and my education in activist spaces further shaped my writing as an Honours student. 

My Honours dissertation looked at Rape Culture through the lens of South African feminism. However, after receiving the Mandela-Rhodes Scholarship in 2017 and seeking broader experiences, I applied to the University of Cape Town (UCT) for a coursework MA in International Relations. During that programme, my interest in African politics deepened as I sought to research the experiences of West African migrants living in South Africa. Researching primarily on transnationalism theory, I was also exposed to other thinking within African feminisms, gender studies, and broader political science methodologies. Doing so gave me an educational experience that grounded me within International Relations, but with the capacity to think and write in an interdisciplinary manner. However, it was in 2021 that my freelance writing and blogging experience solidified. I started writing for a Stellenbosch zine called Say When, where I published my first freelance article on The Politics of Thotdom and Heauxism. This piece, to me, signified stepping outside the rigour of academic writing as I started familiarising myself with writing beyond the structure of introduction, body, conclusion and reference list. From there, I became more confident with trusting my voice and have been able to weave analysis with anecdotal writing, using the best of both worlds to share my viewpoints, thoughts and opinions on a range of topics with different styles of writing (series reviews, personal essays, prose, and more). For example, my first single-author journal article, published this year in AGENDA, was a poem I wrote on my experiences as a black woman in Stellenbosch. The idea that my creative output was acknowledged as a body of intellectual work encapsulates everything I believe:

The personal is political, and the political is personal. 

Bringing the ivory tower of institutions to a level that is accessible and understandable to others is something I am passionate about. My current PhD research is looking at unpacking slay queenism as a concept and using it as a lens to research black femme subjectivities in the South African cosmopolitan context. The overarching research areas involve understanding gender equality in South Africa and postfeminist iterations within a post-apartheid framework. 

My long-term plan is to occupy an intersecting space as a researcher, consultant, freelance writer and creative. Oscillating between these versions of myself as a writer, thinker, and creator is what sparks joy for me as a creative intellectual. Each path feeds into the other and informs how I like to stay in conversation with myself, my community, and the world around me. Being a blogger for SAYAS is a unique opportunity to highlight areas of academia I am passionate about (black feminist theory, gender studies) and would bring these topics to wider audiences whilst also destigmatising and educating broader populations about the ins and outs of being a foreign black woman researcher in South Africa.

Also, if you’re interested in following my academic journey or what I’m up to in my PhD journey, let’s stay in the conversation! I’d love to hear the topics you’re curious about and what you’d like to know about postgraduate studies.

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