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Journal ArticleDOI

“In This Wound of Life …”: Dystopias and Dystopian Tropes in Chenjerai Hove’s Red Hills of Home

Anias Mutekwa
- 18 Nov 2013 - 
- Vol. 29, Iss: 4, pp 98-115
TLDR
In this paper, a reading of Chenjerai Hove's poetry volume Red Hills of Home (1985) is presented as a dystopia, and the authors argue 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.
Abstract
SummaryThis 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 nativi...

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Journal ArticleDOI

South Africa and Zimbabwe

TL;DR: In 2013, the South African literary awards reflected the range of books published, with each of the main awards going to a different book as mentioned in this paper, and a wide range of novels were published; there was an increase in the short stories in print; strong new voices emerged and many books gained both popular and critical attention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dystopia and Heterotopia

TL;DR: In this article , the authors use Foucault's notion of heterotopia to examine how the actuality of such different spaces throughout the novel allows the reimagining of alternate ways of life for the female characters.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Family Feuds Gender Nationalism and the Family

Anne P. McClintock
- 01 Jul 1993 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, Anderson argues that all nationalisms are gendered, all are invented, and all are dangerous dangerous, not in Eric Hobsbawm's sense as having to be opposed, but in the sense of representing relations to political power and to the technologies of violence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ubuntu: An African contribution to (re)search for/with a 'humble togetherness'

TL;DR: In this paper, the Southern African indigenous philosophy of Ubuntu is discussed in a discussion in two parts, the first part providing a working definition and situating it within African epistemology and the socio-political contexts of its invocation, and the second part locates more personal interactions and a search for a 'humble togetherness' within the context of a township school in South Africa.
Book

Dystopian Literature: A Theory and Research Guide

TL;DR: A Guide to Selected Modern Cultural Criticism with Relevance to Dystopian Literature as mentioned in this paper, a guide to Selected Utopian Fictions Dystopians fiction Dystopia fiction A Guide To Selected Dystopias Drama A Guide to selected dystopian Films Bibliography Index