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Transgression and beyond : Dambudzo Marechera and Zimbabwean literatureShaw, Drew Campbell January 2003 (has links)
Recent criticism has claimed Marechera's unconventionality represents an anomaly in Zimbabwean literature. Problematically, this implies a fundamental separation of the author from the concerns, styles and strategies of other writers. In this thesis I argue, on the contrary, that Marechera demonstrates a propensity for dialogue with other Zimbabwean writers. Moreover, such a dialogue is crucial to the development of a critical discourse capable of addressing elements of contradiction. Returning Marechera to the heart of debate in Zimbabwean literature, the thesis focuses on the meaning of his transgressions, alongside selected texts by other Zimbabwean authors. These include Doris Lessing, Charles Mungoshi, Shimmer Chinodya, Yvonne Vera, Tsitsi Dangarembga, Nevanji Madanhire, Chenjerai Hove, and Stanley Nyamfukudza. I also consider the relevance of lesser-known women's writing and queer narratives, and Marechera's meaning to anti-racist, feminist, and gay liberation initiatives. As a background to my analysis, I ascertain discursive links in an historical sequence of sexual regulation. I argue that the 'black peril' panics in settler society (fear of interracial sex), the rounding-up of single women deemed to be prostitutes in the 1980s, and the anti-gay campaigns of the mid-1990s are all underpinned by a moral discourse which continuously reproduces an ideology of racial, social and sexual hygiene. Marechera's writing refuses this ideology, I claim, but his transgressions are rarely straightforward and frequently misunderstood. His treatment of interracial sexuality deeply problematises conventional concepts and representations of racial identity: his controversial characterisations of women subvert traditional patriarchalist iconographies of womanhood; and his treatment of queer issues (unprecedented in Zimbabwean literature) destabilises assumptions of heteronormativity. Despite such radicalism, however, Marechera's writing, moving beyond transgression. remains notoriously inconsistent and therefore resistant, I argue, to assimilation by progressive political projects. Although Marechera complicates debates, dialogue with the author is crucial, I nevertheless maintain, precisely for this reason.
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“A casa tornou-se minha mente": a representação da realidade em The House of Hunger, de Dambudzo Marechera / “The House had taken over my mind": the representation of reality in The House of Hunger, by Dambudzo MarecheraAndrade, Nayara Cristina Rodrigues de 29 September 2016 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2016-09-29 / The aim of this research and of the dissertation resulting from it is the analysis of the
construction of the representation of reality in the book The House of Hunger (1978), by
Dambudzo Marechera. Prominent writer from Zimbabwe, inscribed in the African
Literature in English, his works do not have yet translations into Portuguese. In his own
country, he has suffered several accusations for refusing to write according to the Preand
Post-Independence national call to the production of works under the 19th century
Realism and the 20th century Socialist Realism. His rejection of these “traditions” has
resulted in a critical fortune that sometimes vilifies his works for being antirealist and
anti-mimetic. This work focuses primarily on tracing how the concept of mimesis
already presented differences in Ancient Greece, through Plato’s and Aristotle’s ideas,
and how the contribution of the theorist Erich Auerbach (2013) collaborates for the
analysis and understanding of the construction of the representation of reality in the
works by Dambudzo Marechera, which re-evaluates the charges against the author afore
mentioned. For the development of this thesis, we decided to focus our attention on the
novel “The House of Hunger” and the short stories “Burning in the Rain” and “The
Transformation of Harry”, through the analysis of how the choice of the narrative point
of view used in the works and how their narratives are constructed help for the
construction of the representation of reality. In the Third Chapter, we made use of the
postcolonial theories by Homi Bhabha (1998) and Frantz Fanon (2005) to help us
analyze how mimesis is built in the short story “Black Skin What Mask”, through an
identity crisis suffered by the protagonist-character. The short-story, which has in its
title an obvious paraphrase of the title of Fanon’s Black Skin, White Masks (2008), has
the construction of reality emerging through the tension between the fictional entity and
the environment, which is a configuration of what Erich Auerbach understands mimesis
is. / O objetivo desta pesquisa e da dissertação dela resultante é a análise da construção da
representação da realidade no livro The House of Hunger (1978), de Dambudzo
Marechera. Proeminente escritor do Zimbábue, inscrito na literatura africana de língua
inglesa, suas obras ainda não têm traduções para a língua portuguesa. Dentro do seu
país, o autor foi alvo de diversas acusações por se negar a escrever segundo a chamada
nacional pré e pós-independência, que objetivava produzir obras que obedecessem à
estética do realismo do século XIX ou do realismo socialista do século XX. Sua rejeição
a essa “tradição” resultou em uma fortuna crítica que, por vezes, vilipendia suas obras
por serem antirrealistas e antimiméticas. Esta dissertação tem como foco principal traçar
o modo como o conceito de mímesis já apresentava divergências desde a Grécia antiga,
com Platão e Aristóteles, e como as contribuições do teórico Erich Auerbach (2013)
colaboram para a análise e entendimento do modo da construção da representação da
realidade na obra de Dambudzo Marechera, o que reavalia a acusação mencionada
anteriormente. Para o desenvolvimento desta dissertação, decidimos focar nossa atenção
na novela “The House of Hunger” e os contos “Burning in the Rain” e “The Transformation
of Harry”, para analisamos como a escolha do foco narrativo usado nas obras
e o modo como suas narrativas são construídas ajudam na construção da representação
da realidade. No capítulo terceiro, fizemos uso das teorias pós-coloniais de Homi
Bhabha (1998) e de Frantz Fanon (2005) para analisarmos o modo como a mímesis é
construída no conto “Black Skin What Mask”, através de uma crise identitária
vivenciada pelo personagem-protagonista. O conto, que tem em seu título uma paráfrase
evidente da obra Pele negra, máscaras brancas (2008), de Frantz Fanon, tem sua
realidade construída em meio à tensão entre a entidade ficcional e o ambiente, o que é a
configuração daquilo que Erich Auerbach considera seja a mímesis.
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Champ de tension entre littérature africaine et surréalismeAmor, Anis Ben 02 February 2011 (has links)
Die surrealistische Idee hatte einen starken Einfluss auf die Begründer der Négritude-Bewegung Aimé Césaire, Léopold Sédar Senghor und Léon-Gontran Damas. Diese Beziehung ist vielfach untersucht worden. Weitgehend unberücksichtigt ist bisher die jüngere Generation afrikanischer Schiftsteller geblieben. In dieser Studie wird daher besonders exemplarisch Dambudzo Marechera behandelt, dessen Werk noch nicht unter surrealistischen Aspekten untersucht wurde. Es geht darum, die Formen der literarischen Avantgarde in Afrika südlich der Sahara in ihren surrealistischen Prägungen anhand der Poetik und Lyrik des postkolonialen simbabwischen Schriftstellers Marechera zu analysieren. Es wird das Verhältnis zwischen dem europäischen Surrealismus und den afrikanischen Literaten, insbesondere der späteren Generation untersucht und die Art der Rezeption analysiert. Der Surrealismus ist eine bedeutende Tendenz in der afrikanischen Literatur, die sich unmittelbar auf die postkolonialen Realitäten bezieht und verdient es daher, in weit stärkerem Maße als bisher, beachtet zu werden. / The surrealistic idea has surely had a great influence on the founders of the Négritude-Movement. We are able to find it in the works and poetics of Césaire, Senghor and Damas, and especially in the surrealistically orientated review Tropiques as well as in the critical reception of the African literature. The first alliance of the representatives of the first generation of African poets with Surrealism is due to some of their shared objectives such as the questioning of the colonial system, the critic of colonialism and the recovery and revalorization of the African cultural heritage. The first African poets like Senghor, Césaire and Damas tried to incorporate and apply the surrealistic program to their proper context in order to achieve their own targets, such as: poetically, like Rimbaud declared, to change life and politically, like Marx stated, to change the world. The relationship between Surrealism and African literature presents the main subject of this paper. The dissertation treats particularly authors, who have not yet been examined from a surrealistic point of view. Concerning this thesis, Dambudzo Marechera is regarded above all as an exemplary representative for new literary avant-garde writing from Africa. The area of research for this study is limited most notably on forms of literary Avant-gardes in Africa south of the Sahara and most of all on surrealistic forms. This will be examined by the means of artistic conceptions and philosophy as well as poetic extracts of the postcolonial Zimbabwean writer, which will demonstrate the tendencies of a new trend of writing. The dissertation examines the relationship between European Surrealism and African poetry stemmed from the first and later generations of African writers through Césaire and Marechera. Additionally, it presents a pleadge for pushing the boundaries of research in the field of Surrealisms of African literature and awakening the interest for more research concerning the topic of this paper.
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Recasting history : imagining and mapping out identities in some Zimbabwean poetryMusvoto, Rangarirai Alfred 21 October 2011 (has links)
This study investigates how selected Zimbabwean poets use their poetry to re-imagine and rewrite Zimbabwean history to create new identities. It seeks to achieve this by analyzing the poetry of Musaemura Zimunya, Chenjerai Hove, Dambudzo Marechera, Philip Zhuwao, Freedom Nyamubaya and some other women poets from the anthology A Woman’s Plea and John Eppel’s poetry. The study argues that history and identity are unstable concepts whose meanings and usages are influenced by a variety of factors. It further contends that while the significations of history are generally split between how it is regarded in the academic discipline of history and its meanings outside the academic discipline, the controversies surrounding history are about the ways of representing the past. The study builds its central arguments around this existence of multiple ways of ordering the past, and asserts that poetry is also a form of representing history which utilizes its own rhetoric to authorize its versions of the past and construct identities in its own unique ways. These arguments are raised in Chapter One. The analysis of the selected poets’ texts in Chapters Two, Three, Four, Five and Six links them to the arguments raised in Chapter One. It critiques the versions of histories and the nature of identities that are represented differently by different poets. The study in these chapters reveals that poetic narratives are unstable accounts of both the past and identity, but it is this instability that allows poetry to interrogate narrow concepts of what is ‘real’ in history. There are both similar and dissimilar trends that abound in the selected poets’ texts which reveal that even within the poetic mode of representation, there are layers of understanding of the metaphorical symbols which we use to fix the meanings of Zimbabwean history and identities. The study applies different theoretical approaches to the work of each poet in order to show how each has different contribution to make towards the recovery of Zimbabwe’s past and how it speaks to our present. / Thesis (DLitt)--University of Pretoria, 2011. / English / unrestricted
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Gebrochenes SchweigenNeumann, Stephanie 30 September 2003 (has links)
In der zimbawischen Literatur sind die Themen Nation, Körper, Gewalt, Sprache und Erinnerung aufs engste miteinander verbunden. Durch den Einfluß von Yvonne Vera hat sich in den 90er Jahren das Bild des weiblichen Körpers und insbesondere die Diskussion um koloniale und postkoloniale Gewalt deutlich verändert. Im ersten Teil der Arbeit geht es um die Frage nach Nation. Unterschiedliche Darstellungen von Nehanda und den Kämpferinnen des 2. Chimurenga werden näher beleuchtet. Außerdem geht es um Veras "pastoral novel" in der sie von einer weißen Farmersfrau erzählt. Im zweiten Teil geht es um die Körperkonzepte in der zimbabwischen Literatur. Gewalt in der Familie und vor allem der weibliche Körper als Schlachtfeld steht hier im Mittelpunkt. Die Vergewaltigte und die Prostituierte sind auch weiterhin Symbole für den kolonisierten afrikanischen Kontinent. Vera versucht diese Frauen aus einer anderen Perspektive zu betrachten. Bei ihr geht es um die Erfahrung der Frauen selbst. Der dritte Teil der Arbeit befasst sich schließlich mit der Frage nach der Darstellbarkeit von Gewalt. Wie ist es möglich von Gewalt zu erzählen, ohne die Gewalt zu reproduzieren? Vera beantwortet diese Frage mit der Reflexion über des Erzählen. Bei ihr wirkt Sprache heilend. / In Zimbabwean literature, the themes of nation, body, violence, language, and memory are closely connected. The dissertation analyses, how the treatment of these themes changed significantly during the 1990s. The focus lies on Yvonne Vera's work and its influence on the image of the female body and the debate about colonial as well as postcolonial violence. The first part deals with the question of nation at the example of various narratives about Nehanda and other female freedom fighters in the Second Chimurenga. Further material is drawn from Vera's "pastural novel", in which she tells about a white settler woman. The second part looks at body concepts in Zimbabwean literature. Special attention is paid to domestic violence and the image of the female body as battlefield. The raped woman and the prostitute are still widely used as symbols for the colonized African continent. Vera tries to break with this tradition by looking at such female characters from the perspective of their own experiences. The third part, finally, raises the issue of the representation of violence. How is possible to write about violence without reproducing it? Vera answers this question by reflecting about narration. Language thus works as a healing power in her texts.
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