ABSTRACT

This book explores the unique contributions of various forms of post-2000 life-writings such as the autobiography, epistles, and biographies, to discourses about the nature and socio-politics of what has become known as the Zimbabwean crisis (c. 2000–2009).

Much of what has been written about the Zimbabwean crisis – a decade-long period of unprecedented economic collapse and political upheavals in the southern African country – is strictly discipline-specific and therefore limited to unidimensional modes of theorising the crisis’s many and complex dimensions and dynamics. In this context, this book charts a paradigm shift in hermeneutic and epistemological approaches to comprehending the Zimbabwean crisis. Life-Writing from the Margins in Zimbabwe centres the experiences and memories of ordinary Zimbabweans in pluralizing modes of seeing and knowing the crisis. The book argues that these life-writings present a rich site for encountering versions of the crisis that relate in counter-discursive ways, to the dominant, state-authored narrative of the nation in crisis. Oliver Nyambi’s analysis contributes new ideas to ongoing debates about how cultural texts reflect on the postcoloniality of both power, and experiences and negotiations of power in the context of crisis.

This book will be of interest to scholars and students of African literature, Zimbabwean/African studies, postcolonial literature, life-writing and cultural studies.

chapter 1|44 pages

Introduction

Contested versions of nation, nationness, and nationality

chapter 2|33 pages

“Howzat”

Sport, representing and re-presenting the nation in Henry Olonga’s Blood, Sweat and Treason: My Story 1

chapter 3|30 pages

Alternative iconographies

Recentring unconventional memories in Tekere’s A Lifetime of Struggle

chapter 4|35 pages

“All the Beautiful Soldiers”

Narrating trauma and state violence in Hope Deferred: Narratives of Zimbabwean Lives

chapter 5|36 pages

“Through the Eyes of a Mum”

The affects of disclosure and moral justice in Cathy Buckle’s life-writings of the crisis

chapter 6|23 pages

“… In the Midst of a Very Dark Africa”

Land, spirituality, and an enduring coloniality in Henry Jackson’s Another Farm in Africa

chapter 7|26 pages

Black racism?

Negotiating the colour of belonging in Mugabe and the White African