Contesting the feminist paradigm in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s texts: an africana womanist reading of She no longer weeps, nervous conditions and the book of not

Most often, Tsitsi Dangaremga is referred to as a feminist writer. Her works have been categorized as written in a feminist tradition. This research seeks to contest the notion that she is a feminist writer and that her works are feminist. Rather than having her texts read from a Feminist perspectiv...

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Main Author: Nkiwane, Sihle
Language:English
Published: Midlands State University 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11408/360
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author Nkiwane, Sihle
author_facet Nkiwane, Sihle
author_sort Nkiwane, Sihle
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description Most often, Tsitsi Dangaremga is referred to as a feminist writer. Her works have been categorized as written in a feminist tradition. This research seeks to contest the notion that she is a feminist writer and that her works are feminist. Rather than having her texts read from a Feminist perspective, this study intends to read Dangarembga’s works from an Africana Womanist perspective. This research will show that the African woman does not view her male counterpart as the enemy, but as a victim as well, echoing the co-existence of the male and the female, the existence of healthy families, genuine sisterhood, flexibility in role playing, respect for elders and strong observation of African tradition and culture.
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spelling ir-11408-3602022-06-27T13:49:05Z Contesting the feminist paradigm in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s texts: an africana womanist reading of She no longer weeps, nervous conditions and the book of not Nkiwane, Sihle Feminist paradigm Most often, Tsitsi Dangaremga is referred to as a feminist writer. Her works have been categorized as written in a feminist tradition. This research seeks to contest the notion that she is a feminist writer and that her works are feminist. Rather than having her texts read from a Feminist perspective, this study intends to read Dangarembga’s works from an Africana Womanist perspective. This research will show that the African woman does not view her male counterpart as the enemy, but as a victim as well, echoing the co-existence of the male and the female, the existence of healthy families, genuine sisterhood, flexibility in role playing, respect for elders and strong observation of African tradition and culture. 2014-08-27T14:31:33Z 2014-08-27T14:31:33Z 2013 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/360 en open Midlands State University
spellingShingle Feminist paradigm
Nkiwane, Sihle
Contesting the feminist paradigm in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s texts: an africana womanist reading of She no longer weeps, nervous conditions and the book of not
title Contesting the feminist paradigm in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s texts: an africana womanist reading of She no longer weeps, nervous conditions and the book of not
title_full Contesting the feminist paradigm in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s texts: an africana womanist reading of She no longer weeps, nervous conditions and the book of not
title_fullStr Contesting the feminist paradigm in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s texts: an africana womanist reading of She no longer weeps, nervous conditions and the book of not
title_full_unstemmed Contesting the feminist paradigm in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s texts: an africana womanist reading of She no longer weeps, nervous conditions and the book of not
title_short Contesting the feminist paradigm in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s texts: an africana womanist reading of She no longer weeps, nervous conditions and the book of not
title_sort contesting the feminist paradigm in tsitsi dangarembga’s texts: an africana womanist reading of she no longer weeps, nervous conditions and the book of not
topic Feminist paradigm
url http://hdl.handle.net/11408/360
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