Contesting narratives : constructions of the self and the nation in Zimbabwe polical auto/ Biography

This study is an interpretive analysis of Zimbabwean political auto/biographical narratives in contexts of changing culture, race, ethnicity and gender identity images of the self and nation. I used eclectic theories of postcolonialism to explore the fractured nature of both the processes of identit...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Javangwe, Tasiyana Dzikai
Other Authors: Vambe, M.T. (Prof.)
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4838
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-umkn-dsp01.int.unisa.ac.za-10500-48382016-04-16T04:08:12Z Contesting narratives : constructions of the self and the nation in Zimbabwe polical auto/ Biography Javangwe, Tasiyana Dzikai Vambe, M.T. (Prof.) Political autobiography Representation Social constructionism Imagined community Marginality Self identity 809.8896891 Self in literature Literature and society -- Zimbabwe Zimbabwean literature -- History and criticism Biography as a literary form Biography in literature This study is an interpretive analysis of Zimbabwean political auto/biographical narratives in contexts of changing culture, race, ethnicity and gender identity images of the self and nation. I used eclectic theories of postcolonialism to explore the fractured nature of both the processes of identity construction and narration, and the contradictions inherent in identity categories of nation and self. The problem of using autobiographical memory to recall the momentous events that formed the contradictory identities of self and nation in the creative imagination of the lives of Ian Smith, Maurice Nyagumbo, Abel Muzorewa, Joshua Nkomo, Doris Lessing, Fay Chung, Judith Garfield Todd, Tendai Westerhof and Lutanga Shaba have been highlighted. The study concluded that there are narrative and ideological disjunctures between experiencing life and narrating those experiences to create approximations of coherent identities of individual selves and those of the nation. The study argued that each of the stories analyzed in this study contributed a version of the multiple Zimbabwean narratives that no one story could ever tell without being contested by others. Thus the study explores how white Rhodesian auto/biographies depend on the imperial repertoire to construct varying, even contradicting, images of white identities and the Rhodesian nation, which are also contested by black nationalist life narratives. The narratives by women writers, both white and black, introduced further instabilities to the male authored narratives by moving beyond the conventional understanding of what is ‘political’ in political auto/biographies. The HIV and AIDS narratives by black women thrust into the public sphere personalized versions of self so that the political consequence of their inclusion was not only to image Zimbabwe as a diseased society, but one desperately in need of political solutions to confront the different pathologies inherited from colonialism and which also have continued in the post-independence period. English Studies (D. Litt. et Phil. (English)) 2011-09-23T09:16:29Z 2011-09-23T09:16:29Z 2011-11 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4838 en 1 online resource (308 leaves)
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Political autobiography
Representation
Social constructionism
Imagined community
Marginality
Self identity
809.8896891
Self in literature
Literature and society -- Zimbabwe
Zimbabwean literature -- History and criticism
Biography as a literary form
Biography in literature
spellingShingle Political autobiography
Representation
Social constructionism
Imagined community
Marginality
Self identity
809.8896891
Self in literature
Literature and society -- Zimbabwe
Zimbabwean literature -- History and criticism
Biography as a literary form
Biography in literature
Javangwe, Tasiyana Dzikai
Contesting narratives : constructions of the self and the nation in Zimbabwe polical auto/ Biography
description This study is an interpretive analysis of Zimbabwean political auto/biographical narratives in contexts of changing culture, race, ethnicity and gender identity images of the self and nation. I used eclectic theories of postcolonialism to explore the fractured nature of both the processes of identity construction and narration, and the contradictions inherent in identity categories of nation and self. The problem of using autobiographical memory to recall the momentous events that formed the contradictory identities of self and nation in the creative imagination of the lives of Ian Smith, Maurice Nyagumbo, Abel Muzorewa, Joshua Nkomo, Doris Lessing, Fay Chung, Judith Garfield Todd, Tendai Westerhof and Lutanga Shaba have been highlighted. The study concluded that there are narrative and ideological disjunctures between experiencing life and narrating those experiences to create approximations of coherent identities of individual selves and those of the nation. The study argued that each of the stories analyzed in this study contributed a version of the multiple Zimbabwean narratives that no one story could ever tell without being contested by others. Thus the study explores how white Rhodesian auto/biographies depend on the imperial repertoire to construct varying, even contradicting, images of white identities and the Rhodesian nation, which are also contested by black nationalist life narratives. The narratives by women writers, both white and black, introduced further instabilities to the male authored narratives by moving beyond the conventional understanding of what is ‘political’ in political auto/biographies. The HIV and AIDS narratives by black women thrust into the public sphere personalized versions of self so that the political consequence of their inclusion was not only to image Zimbabwe as a diseased society, but one desperately in need of political solutions to confront the different pathologies inherited from colonialism and which also have continued in the post-independence period. === English Studies === (D. Litt. et Phil. (English))
author2 Vambe, M.T. (Prof.)
author_facet Vambe, M.T. (Prof.)
Javangwe, Tasiyana Dzikai
author Javangwe, Tasiyana Dzikai
author_sort Javangwe, Tasiyana Dzikai
title Contesting narratives : constructions of the self and the nation in Zimbabwe polical auto/ Biography
title_short Contesting narratives : constructions of the self and the nation in Zimbabwe polical auto/ Biography
title_full Contesting narratives : constructions of the self and the nation in Zimbabwe polical auto/ Biography
title_fullStr Contesting narratives : constructions of the self and the nation in Zimbabwe polical auto/ Biography
title_full_unstemmed Contesting narratives : constructions of the self and the nation in Zimbabwe polical auto/ Biography
title_sort contesting narratives : constructions of the self and the nation in zimbabwe polical auto/ biography
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10500/4838
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