ABSTRACT

This book investigates how culture reflects change in Zimbabwe, focusing predominantly on Mnangagwa’s 2017 coup, but also uncovering deeper roots for how renewal and transition are conceived in the country. Since Emmerson Mnangagwa ousted Robert Mugabe in 2017, he has been keen to defi ne his "Second Republic" or "New Dispensation" with a rhetoric of change and a rejection of past political and economic cultures. This multi and inter- disciplinary volume looks to the (social) media, language/ discourse, theatre, images, political speeches and literary fiction and non- fiction to see how they have reflected on this time of unprecedented upheaval. The book argues that themes of self- renewal stretch right back to the formative years of the ZANU PF, and that despite the longevity of Mugabe’s tenure, the latest transition can be seen as part of a complex and protracted layering of postcolonial social, economic and political changes. Providing an innovative investigation of how political change in Zimbabwe is reflected on in cultural texts and products, this book will be of interest to researchers across African history, literature, politics, culture and post- colonial studies.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

The 2017 coup and cultures of change in Zimbabwe

part I|102 pages

Spectacles of change in the Second Republic

chapter 1|19 pages

The patriotic present

The urgency of now in Zimbabwe's “New Dispensation”

chapter 3|15 pages

Mugabeism otherwise?

A critical reflection on toxic leadership and Zimbabwe's “New Dispensation”

chapter 6|18 pages

The ‘spectre’ of Mugabe

Land, change and discursive politics of dispensations in Zimbabwe

part II|132 pages

Tropes of ambivalent “transitions”

chapter 7|19 pages

“We must aspire to be a clean nation”

Ambivalences of transition in “New Dispensation” metaphors of dirt

chapter 8|16 pages

Gukurahundi revisited in the “Second Republic”

Trauma, memory and violence in Novuyo Rosa Tshuma's House of stone

chapter 9|15 pages

Spectacles of transition

Texts and counter-texts in the historiography of Zimbabwe in transition

chapter 10|15 pages

A déjà vu of Orwellian proportions

Re-reading Animal Farm in the context of Zimbabwean politics of change

chapter 12|15 pages

A nation burdened by an unappeased ngozi?

A ‘folk’ cultural perspective on Zimbabwe's stagnation

chapter 13|15 pages

In and out of court

Zimbabwe's perennial framing of opposition politics as ‘nuisance needing judiciary pacification’