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Full Description
At the beginning of 2000, with the launch of the so-called Third Chimurenga, Zimbabwean nationalism revealed some of its most grotesque aspects, resulting in a polarisation of the nation into 'patriots' and 'sell-outs' and dividing academics into groups such as 'regime intellectuals', left-nationalists, left-internationalists, 'nativists' and 'neo-liberals'. Drawing upon the arguments and insights of an array of scholars, many based in Zimbabwe, this book offers a new analysis of the grotesque character of Zimbabwean nationalism, a nationalism that has provoked ambivalent responses locally, regionally and internationally.
Contents
Contents: Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni/James Muzondidya: Introduction: Redemptive or Grotesque Nationalism in the Postcolony? - Sabelo J. Ndlovu-Gatsheni: Beyond the Drama of War: Trajectories of Nationalism in Zimbabwe, the 1890s to 2010 - Robert Muponde: History as Witchcraft: The Narcissism of Warrior Masculinities in Edmund Chipamaunga's War and Post-War Novels - Munyaradzi B. Munochiveyi: 'War Vet Nation'?: Beyond 'Guerrilla Nationalism' and the Search for Other Nationalisms in Zimbabwe - Kudakwashe Manganga: Masculinity (Dodaism), Gender and Nationalism: The Case of the Salisbury Bus Boycott, September 1956 - Finex Ndhlovu: Language Policy, Citizenship and Discourses of Exclusion in Zimbabwe - Jane L. Parpart: Silenced Visions of Citizenship, Democracy and Nation: African MPs in Rhodesian Parliaments, 1963-1978 - Kudzai Pfuwai Matereke: One Zimbabwe Many Faces: The Quest for Political Pluralism in Postcolonial Zimbabwe - Terence M. Mashingaidze: What Blacks, Which Africans and in Whose Zimbabwe? Pan-Africanism, Race and the Politics of Belonging in Postcolonial Zimbabwe - Moses Chikowero: The Third Chimurenga: Land and Song in Zimbabwe's Ultra-Nationalist State Ideology, 2000-2007 - Wendy Willems: 'Powerful Centre' Versus 'Powerless Periphery'? Postcolonial Encounters, Global Media and Nationalism in the 'Zimbabwe Crisis' - Clapperton Mavhunga: The Colony in Us, The Colony as Us.