Spelling suggestions: "subject:"zimbabwean history"" "subject:"zimbabweans history""
1 |
The Importance of Land Redistribution in Zimbabwean Politics and the Impact on its Foreign Policy Toward South Africa and Britain.Huddle, Natalie 26 February 2007 (has links)
Student Number : 0005589F -
MA research report -
School of International Relations -
Faculty of Humanities / This research report identifies the role that the land redistribution in Zimbabwe plays
and has played in the country’s politics and its foreign policy toward both South
Africa and Britain. The situation in Zimbabwe is explained in full using a wide range
of sources. Zimbabwean history is investigated in-depth to reveal the path the country
has followed, and what factors from the past have led to the country’s situation today.
International relations discourse and international law are evaluated in order to
explain the country’s complicated situation in academic terms, while South African
and British foreign policy are analysed in order to gauge international and regional
reactions to the crisis.
|
2 |
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
|
Page generated in 0.0529 seconds