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Vol. 32 No. 3 (2016): Memory, Heritage and the Politics of Transformation: The Place of “Colonial” Texts in Post-2000 South Africa and Zimbabwe
Vol. 32 No. 3 (2016): Memory, Heritage and the Politics of Transformation: The Place of “Colonial” Texts in Post-2000 South Africa and Zimbabwe
Published:
2016-09-01
Editorial
Introduction: Memory, Heritage and the Politics of Transformation: The Place of “Colonial” Texts in Post-2000 South Africa and Zimbabwe
Cuthbeth Tagwirei
1-4
PDF
Articles
The Nucleation of White Zimbabwean Writing
Cuthbeth Tagwirei
5-20
PDF
“Break and Be Broken”, She Said, “That is the Law of Life”: Loss and Racial Melancholia in Marlene van Niekerk’s Agaat
Danyela Demir
21-35
PDF
“There is the Black Man’s Story and the White Man’s Story”: Narratives of Self and the Valence of “Stories” in Postapartheid Culture
Leon de Kock
36-58
PDF
Dialogues of Memory, Heritage and Transformation: Re-membering Contested Identities and Spaces in Postcolonial South African and Zimbabwean White Writings
Muchativugwa Liberty Hove
59-76
PDF
Half ’n Half: Mytho-Historical and Spatial Entanglements in Charlie Human’s Apocalypse Now Now and Kill Baxter
Olivier Moreillon, Alan Muller
78-97
PDF
Being White in Post-2000 Zimbabwe: A Reading of Eames’ Cry of the Go-Away Bird
Shamiso Misi
98-108
PDF
Engagement with Colonial and Apartheid Narratives in Contemporary South Africa: A Monumental Debate
Shanade Barnabas
109-128
PDF
Colonial Heterotopia as Metanarrative in White Rhodesian Writing: A Post-millennial Reading of Peter Godwin’s Mukiwa: A White Boy in Africa.
Tasiyana D. Javangwe
129-139
PDF
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