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Space, voice and authority : white critical thought on the Black Zimbabwean novel

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dc.contributor.advisor Mutasa, D. E.
dc.contributor.advisor Bopape, M. L. (Malekutu Levy)
dc.contributor.author Gwekwerere, Tavengwa
dc.date.accessioned 2014-08-21T09:21:24Z
dc.date.available 2014-08-21T09:21:24Z
dc.date.issued 2013-11
dc.identifier.citation Gwekwerere, Tavengwa (2013) Space, voice and authority : white critical thought on the Black Zimbabwean novel, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13848> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13848
dc.description.abstract All bodies of critical discourse on any given literary canon seek visibility through self- celebration, subversion of competing critical ideas and identification with supposedly popular, scientific and incisive critical theories. Thus, the literary-critical quest for significance and visibility is, in essence, a quest for „space‟, „voice‟ and „authority‟ in the discussion of aspects of a given literary corpus. This research explores the politics of „space‟, „voice‟ and „authority‟ in „white critical thought‟ on „the black Zimbabwean novel‟. It unfolds in the context of the realisation that as a body of critical discourse on „the black Zimbabwean novel‟, „white critical thought‟ does not only emerge in an intellectual matrix in which it shares and competes for „space‟, „voice‟ and „authority‟ with other bodies of critical thought on the literary episteme in question; it also develops in the ambit of Euro-African cultural politics of hegemony and resistance. Thus, the research sets out to identify the ways in which „white critical thought‟ affirms and perpetuates or questions and negates European critical benchmarks and cultural models in the discussion of selected aspects of „the black Zimbabwean novel‟. The investigation considers the fissures at the heart of „white critical thought‟ as a critical discourse and the myriad of ways in which it interacts with competing critical discourses on the „the black Zimbabwean novel‟. It derives impetus from the fact that while other versions of critical thought on „the black Zimbabwean novel‟ have received extensive metacritical discussion elsewhere, „white critical thought‟ remains largely under-discussed. This phenomenon enables it to solidify into a settled body of critical thought. The metacritical discussion of „white critical thought‟ in this research constitutes part of the repertoire of efforts that will help check the solidification of critical discourses into hegemonic bodies of thought. The research makes use of Afrocentric and Postcolonial critical tenets to advance the contention that while „white critical thought‟ on „the black Zimbabwean novel‟ is fraught with fissures and contradictions that speak directly to its complexity and resistance to neat categorisation, it is largely vulnerable to identification as part of the paraphernalia of European cultural and intellectual hegemony in African literature and its criticism, given its tendency to discuss the literature outside the context of critical theories that emerge from the same culture and history with the literary corpus in question. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (vi, 256 pages) en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Africa en
dc.subject African culture en
dc.subject African literature en
dc.subject Agency en
dc.subject Authority en
dc.subject Black critical thought en
dc.subject Black Zimbabwean literature en
dc.subject Europe en
dc.subject European culture en
dc.subject European hegemony en
dc.subject Imperialism of discourse en
dc.subject Knowledge economy en
dc.subject Literary-critical discourse en
dc.subject Metacriticism en
dc.subject Space en
dc.subject The black Zimbabwean novel en
dc.subject Voice en
dc.subject White critical thought en
dc.subject Zimbabwean literature en
dc.subject.ddc 809.8896891
dc.subject.lcsh Zimbabwean fiction -- Black authors -- History and criticism en
dc.subject.lcsh Politics in literature en
dc.subject.lcsh Afrocentrism en
dc.subject.lcsh Eurocentrism en
dc.subject.lcsh Culture in literature en
dc.subject.lcsh Authors, Black -- Zimbabwe -- Intellectual life en
dc.subject.lcsh Decolonization in literature en
dc.title Space, voice and authority : white critical thought on the Black Zimbabwean novel en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department African Languages en
dc.description.degree D. Litt. et Phil. (African Languages)


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