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Shona fiction and its treatment of socio-economic issues in Zimbabwe

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dc.contributor.author Makaudze, Godwin
dc.date.accessioned 2009-11-26T10:10:42Z
dc.date.available 2009-11-26T10:10:42Z
dc.date.issued 2009-06
dc.identifier.citation Makaudze, Godwin (2009) Shona fiction and its treatment of socio-economic issues in Zimbabwe, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/2956> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/2956
dc.description.abstract Much of what has been researched on Shona fiction has been limited to literature published before independence. The current research endeavours to assess the treatment of socio-economic issues as conveyed through fiction published since 1990. This fiction focuses on socio-economic issues in both pre-colonial and independent Zimbabwe. The study endeavours to establish if writers who focus on these issues in the pre-colonial era have been able to reclaim a complicated picture of the African pasts. It also discusses fiction that focuses on post-independence experiences; such as extent of the impact of empowerment brought about by independence, continued poverty among Africans, emancipation of the female being and the HIV and AIDS pandemic. Here, it strives to ascertain if the writers have identified the causes and offer meaningful solutions to these. The study observes that contemporary novelists on the Shona pasts have reclaimed more realistic ‘worlds’ when compared to their predecessors who have largely presented distorted images of these pasts. On the outcome of independence, two groups portray it as a total success and a total failure respectively, whilst the third and more successful group gives a balanced exposition. Fiction on poverty among contemporary Africans falls into two classes, namely rural and urban. The former still suffers from the heavy influence of colonial myths as it only highlights the effects of poverty without situating them in their tension-ridden historical context. The latter provides important sociological information on the plight of the characters but is lacking when it comes to suggesting ways of alleviating such poverty. On female empowerment, it emerges that while some writers are for women empowerment, others are against it. Women writers are better at explaining problems of women. However, both groups are still unable to identify the root cause of the incapacitation of women. On HIV and AIDS, whilst male writers demonstrate a wider social vision on the factors that disempower society against the spread and curbing of the virus, female authors still fall in the trap of blaming both men and Shona traditional customs. Overall, it emerges that contemporary Shona writers reveal contradictory modes in articulating these issues. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (viii, 265 leaves)
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Socio-economic issues en
dc.subject Distorted images en
dc.subject Contemporary writers en
dc.subject Disempowerment en
dc.subject Colonial law en
dc.subject.ddc 896.39753209
dc.subject.lcsh Shona fiction -- History and criticism
dc.title Shona fiction and its treatment of socio-economic issues in Zimbabwe en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department African Languages
dc.description.degree Thesis (D. Litt et Phil. (African Languages))


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