And Now the Poets Do Not Speak: The Politics of Representation in Zimbabwean Writing in Shona and English (1954–2023)

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2663-6565/13545

Keywords:

Zimbabwean literature, creative writing, nationalist criticism, Afropolitanism, poverty-porn

Abstract

The article analyses the politics of representation in Zimbabwean literature written in Shona and English, particularly exploring the policing of creative writing from Rhodesia to Zimbabwe. We argue that the position of the Zimbabwean writer portends a dilemma that amounts to being gagged from depicting certain truths about the nation or not speaking at all. In Rhodesia, the black writer was under surveillance by the Rhodesia Literature Bureau, which forced the writer to focus on issues that were considered apolitical. Those who wanted to confront colonialism head-on published outside Rhodesia, but at a time when the nationalist struggle was gaining momentum, these writers were expected to demonise colonialism while praising the nationalist movement regardless of existing evidence of its leaders becoming tyrants in the independent nation. The same dilemmas afflict the new crop of Zimbabwe’s writers who feel the need to depict the ills of Zimbabwe as they are, while at the same time exposing themselves to the nationalist and Afropolitan critic’s accusations of churning out poverty porn. Our central argument is that regardless of these accusations from certain sections of their readers, writers are free to depict what they see in society, whether good or bad. In our exploration of these dilemmas, we refer to notable works by writers and critics from Zimbabwe. We also give attention to relevant critical works and reviews and critically analyse the perspectives that animate such critical works and reviews. The researchers only speak Shona and English, which has necessitated the scope of the research to be limited to writings in Shona and English only.

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Author Biographies

Tanaka Chidora, University of Malawi

University of Malawi

University of the Free State,

Kudzayi Ngara, University of the Free State

Kudzayi Ngara is a PhD graduate of the English Department at the University of the Western Cape (2012). His research focuses on how literary imaginings and representations (by means of fiction and “creative non-fiction”) of cityscapes offer different (to geographical, anthropological and ethnological approaches towards studies of African urbanity) but complementary pathways to the uncovering of the fluid and contradictory qualities that mark many southern African postcolonial cities as sites of social, economic and cultural transformation, as well as being spaces in which notions of contested identities are spatialised. Kudzayi also has research interests in magical realism as an aspect of postcolonial self-narration, and a developing interest in multilingual citizenship – specifically the languages and cultures of the Maluti-Drakensburg Afromontane – as well as post-apartheid public cultures. He currently lectures English Literary and Cultural Studies (at both undergrad and postgrad levels) at the University of the Free State, Qwaqwa Campus in South Africa.

 

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Published

2023-12-20

How to Cite

Chidora, Tanaka, and Kudzayi Ngara. 2023. “And Now the Poets Do Not Speak: The Politics of Representation in Zimbabwean Writing in Shona and English (1954–2023)”. Imbizo 14 (2):18 pages . https://doi.org/10.25159/2663-6565/13545.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2023-04-18
Accepted 2023-11-17
Published 2023-12-20