The image of absence and the politics of naming in Shona war fiction

During Zimbabwe’s liberation war thousands of young people crossed into neighbouring countries to take up arms to fight and end colonialism. There is sufficient evidence that many of these young people were women. Political rhetoric also maintains that women fought alongside their male counterpar...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chigidi, Willie L., Mutasa, Davie E.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11408/817
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1779905208921358336
author Chigidi, Willie L.
Mutasa, Davie E.
author_facet Chigidi, Willie L.
Mutasa, Davie E.
author_sort Chigidi, Willie L.
collection DSpace
description During Zimbabwe’s liberation war thousands of young people crossed into neighbouring countries to take up arms to fight and end colonialism. There is sufficient evidence that many of these young people were women. Political rhetoric also maintains that women fought alongside their male counterparts. However, in the Shona literature that depicts Zimbabwe’s guerrilla war there is a glaring absence of female characters who play the roles of guerrilla fighters. This article is an attempt to discuss this absence and to explain why there are very few guerrilla girls in Shona war fiction. The article argues that female guerrillas are not given much space in Shona war novels because the writers of these novels continue the oral folktale tradition in which women are rarely made heroines. It is further argued that in the actual guerrilla war of the 1970s female guerrillas were rarely seen fighting at the war front, that the pioneer guerrillas were men and that the masculine discourse about the war excluded women. Moreover, only men have written Shona war novels.
format Article
id ir-11408-817
institution My University
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher AOSIS
record_format dspace
spelling ir-11408-8172022-06-27T13:49:06Z The image of absence and the politics of naming in Shona war fiction Chigidi, Willie L. Mutasa, Davie E. Shona war fiction Liberation war During Zimbabwe’s liberation war thousands of young people crossed into neighbouring countries to take up arms to fight and end colonialism. There is sufficient evidence that many of these young people were women. Political rhetoric also maintains that women fought alongside their male counterparts. However, in the Shona literature that depicts Zimbabwe’s guerrilla war there is a glaring absence of female characters who play the roles of guerrilla fighters. This article is an attempt to discuss this absence and to explain why there are very few guerrilla girls in Shona war fiction. The article argues that female guerrillas are not given much space in Shona war novels because the writers of these novels continue the oral folktale tradition in which women are rarely made heroines. It is further argued that in the actual guerrilla war of the 1970s female guerrillas were rarely seen fighting at the war front, that the pioneer guerrillas were men and that the masculine discourse about the war excluded women. Moreover, only men have written Shona war novels. 2016-04-07T06:41:52Z 2016-04-07T06:41:52Z 2013 Article 0258-2279 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/817 en Literator;Vol. 34 (1) open AOSIS
spellingShingle Shona war fiction
Liberation war
Chigidi, Willie L.
Mutasa, Davie E.
The image of absence and the politics of naming in Shona war fiction
title The image of absence and the politics of naming in Shona war fiction
title_full The image of absence and the politics of naming in Shona war fiction
title_fullStr The image of absence and the politics of naming in Shona war fiction
title_full_unstemmed The image of absence and the politics of naming in Shona war fiction
title_short The image of absence and the politics of naming in Shona war fiction
title_sort image of absence and the politics of naming in shona war fiction
topic Shona war fiction
Liberation war
url http://hdl.handle.net/11408/817
work_keys_str_mv AT chigidiwilliel theimageofabsenceandthepoliticsofnaminginshonawarfiction
AT mutasadaviee theimageofabsenceandthepoliticsofnaminginshonawarfiction
AT chigidiwilliel imageofabsenceandthepoliticsofnaminginshonawarfiction
AT mutasadaviee imageofabsenceandthepoliticsofnaminginshonawarfiction