''In This Wound of Life ... ": Dystopias and Dystopian Tropes in Chenjerai Hove's Red Hills of Home.

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Abstract

This article is a reading of Chenjerai Hove's poetry volume Red Hills of Home (1985) as a dystopia. It locates this text within the context of the evolving postcolonial realities of the first decade of Zimbabwe's independence. It argues that the text is informed by a dystopian import and sensibility in which forlornness, hopelessness, angst, bewilderment, pain, and betrayal mark the lived experiences of the mainly subaltern subjects who people its world which is fragmented and framed by larger forces beyond their control. It further argues that Hove mainly employs the figure of a dystopian family, together with the technique of defamiliarisation, to represent not only an existential dystopia, but also a dystopian postcolonial society, and an equally dystopian civilisation. So, it is through dystopia that Hove is able to fashion out a metalanguage with which to critique various aspects of human life and existence, Zimbabwe's postcolonial conditions, and capitalist modernity. Because of Hove's nativist sensibilities, the Bantu philosophy of ubuntu, and Acholonu's motherism theory are employed to explore the ontological and gendered dimensions of the dystopian perspectives in this poetry volume.
Opsomming
Hierdie artikel interpreteer Chenjerai Hove se digbundel Red Hills of Home (1985) as 'n distopie. Die teks is gelee binne die konteks van die ontwikkelende postkoloniale werklikhede van die eerste dekade van Zimbabwe se onafhanklikwording. Ek voer aan dat die teks gevorm word deur 'n distopiese impak en bewustheid waar troosteloosheid, hopeloosheid, angs, verbystering, pyn en verraad kenmerkend is van die lewenservarings van die hoofsaaklik ondergeskikte mense wat sy gefragmenteerde wereld bewoon en omring is deur groter magte waaroor hulle geen beheer het nie. Verder voer ek aan dat Hove die beeld van 'n distopiese gesin - asook die tegniek van defamiliarisering - gebruik om nie slegs 'n eksistensiele distopie uit te beeld nie, maar ook 'n distopiese postkoloniale samelewing en 'n ewe distopiese beskawing. Oil is dus met behulp van distopie dat Hove 'n metataal skep waarmee hy die verskillende aspekte van die menslike leefwyse en bestaan, postkoloniale toestande in Zimbabwe en die kapitalistiese moderniteit ondersoek. As gevolg van Hove se nativistiese bewustheid, word die Bantoe-filosofie van ubuntu en Acholonu se moederisme-teorie aangewend om die ontologiese en vergenderde dimensies van die distopiese perspektiewe in sy digbundel te ondersoek. 

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Author Biography

Anias Mutekwa, Midlands State University

Anias Mutekwa is a lecturer in the Department of English and Communications of the Midlands State University, Gweru, Zimbabwe. He is also a PhD student in the Department of English at the North-West University, South Africa.

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Published

2013-12-01

How to Cite

Mutekwa, Anias. 2013. “ ": Dystopias and Dystopian Tropes in Chenjerai Hove’s Red Hills of Home”. Journal of Literary Studies 29 (4):18 pages. https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/jls/article/view/14078.

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