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Interface of history and fiction : the Zimbabwean liberation war novel

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dc.contributor.advisor Mutasa, D. E.
dc.contributor.advisor Bopape, M. L. (Malekutu Levy)
dc.contributor.author Muwati, Itai
dc.date.accessioned 2015-06-03T07:42:30Z
dc.date.available 2015-06-03T07:42:30Z
dc.date.issued 2009-11
dc.identifier.citation Muwati, Itai (2009) Interface of history and fiction : the Zimbabwean liberation war novel, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18686> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/18686
dc.description.abstract The research examines the interface of history and fiction. It predominantly focuses on historical fiction on the Zimbabwean liberation war written in Shona, Ndebele and English and published after the attainment of political independence in 1980. Historical fiction on the liberation war is both biographical and autobiographical. Consequently, the study comes to the conclusion that historical fiction is a veritable stakeholder in the history issue in Zimbabwe. It becomes another type or source of history that cannot be papered over when dealing with the nation’s history. In a nation where liberation war history is not only taken seriously, but is also a vigorously contested terrain, historical fiction becomes part of those discursive contestations, particularly on nation and nationalism. It is in this regard that the study problematises the interface of history and fiction by reasoning that historical fiction published in the early 1980s largely advances a state-centered perspective which views history, nation and nationalism in positive terms. This discourse uses history in order to argue for a single nation that derives its identity from the heroic and symbolic guerrilla characters. Nationalism is exclusively presented as humanising and as being the sole legitimate political brand capable of leading the nation. On the other hand, historical fiction written in English and published in the late 1980s onwards represents alternative historical truths that contest nationalism and debunk official definitions of nation. This discourse leads to the pluralisation of perspectives on nation and nationalism. The focus on historical fiction published in three languages used in Zimbabwe is a conscious attempt to transcend ethnicity in critical scholarship. Discussing novels in Shona, Ndebele and English, which are the three main languages in Zimbabwe, makes it possible for the study to draw reasoned conclusions on the bearing of time, language, region and background among others on historical representation. This undertaking brings to the fore how literature responding to similar historical processes appears moderately conjunctive and principally disjunctive. Correspondingly, it also shows various trends in the development of liberation war fiction in Zimbabwe. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resourse (x, 341 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Historical fiction en
dc.subject Nationalism en
dc.subject Nation en
dc.subject Liberation war en
dc.subject Contesting representations en
dc.subject Historical representation en
dc.subject Literature Bureau en
dc.subject Zimbabwe/Shona/Ndebele literature en
dc.subject History of violence en
dc.subject History as opposition en
dc.subject History as instrument of hegemony en
dc.subject.ddc 896.39753209
dc.subject.lcsh Shona literature -- History and criticism
dc.subject.lcsh Struggle in literature
dc.subject.lcsh War in literature
dc.subject.lcsh Zimbabwean fiction -- History and criticism
dc.title Interface of history and fiction : the Zimbabwean liberation war novel en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department African Languages en
dc.description.department D. Litt. et Phil. (African Languages)


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