“In This Wound of Life …”: Dystopias and Dystopian Tropes in Chenjerai Hove’s Red Hills of Home

This article is a reading of Chenjerai Hove’s poetry volume Red Hills of Home (1985) as a dystopia. It locates this text within the context of the evolving postcolonial realities of the first decade of Zimbabwe’s independence. It argues that the text is informed by a dystopian import and sensibility...

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Main Author: Mutekwa, Anias
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis (Routledge) 2016
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02564718.2013.856662
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author Mutekwa, Anias
author_facet Mutekwa, Anias
author_sort Mutekwa, Anias
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description This article is a reading of Chenjerai Hove’s poetry volume Red Hills of Home (1985) as a dystopia. It locates this text within the context of the evolving postcolonial realities of the first decade of Zimbabwe’s independence. It argues that the text is informed by a dystopian import and sensibility in which forlornness, hopelessness, angst, bewilderment, pain, and betrayal mark the lived experiences of the mainly subaltern subjects who people its world which is fragmented and framed by larger forces beyond their control. It further argues that Hove mainly employs the figure of a dystopian family, together with the technique of defamiliarisation, to represent not only an existential dystopia, but also a dystopian postcolonial society, and an equally dystopian civilisation. So, it is through dystopia that Hove is able to fashion out a metalanguage with which to critique various aspects of human life and existence, Zimbabwe’s postcolonial conditions, and capitalist modernity. Because of Hove’s nativist sensibilities, the Bantu philosophy of ubuntu, and Acholonu’s motherism theory are employed to explore the ontological and gendered dimensions of the dystopian perspectives in this poetry volume.
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spelling ir-11408-8592022-06-27T13:49:06Z “In This Wound of Life …”: Dystopias and Dystopian Tropes in Chenjerai Hove’s Red Hills of Home Mutekwa, Anias Literary dystopias Zimbabwe’s independence, postcolonial conditions This article is a reading of Chenjerai Hove’s poetry volume Red Hills of Home (1985) as a dystopia. It locates this text within the context of the evolving postcolonial realities of the first decade of Zimbabwe’s independence. It argues that the text is informed by a dystopian import and sensibility in which forlornness, hopelessness, angst, bewilderment, pain, and betrayal mark the lived experiences of the mainly subaltern subjects who people its world which is fragmented and framed by larger forces beyond their control. It further argues that Hove mainly employs the figure of a dystopian family, together with the technique of defamiliarisation, to represent not only an existential dystopia, but also a dystopian postcolonial society, and an equally dystopian civilisation. So, it is through dystopia that Hove is able to fashion out a metalanguage with which to critique various aspects of human life and existence, Zimbabwe’s postcolonial conditions, and capitalist modernity. Because of Hove’s nativist sensibilities, the Bantu philosophy of ubuntu, and Acholonu’s motherism theory are employed to explore the ontological and gendered dimensions of the dystopian perspectives in this poetry volume. 2016-04-16T12:11:37Z 2016-04-16T12:11:37Z 2013 Article 0256-4718 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02564718.2013.856662 en Journal of Literary Studies;Vol. 29, Issue 4, p. 98-115 none Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
spellingShingle Literary dystopias
Zimbabwe’s independence, postcolonial conditions
Mutekwa, Anias
“In This Wound of Life …”: Dystopias and Dystopian Tropes in Chenjerai Hove’s Red Hills of Home
title “In This Wound of Life …”: Dystopias and Dystopian Tropes in Chenjerai Hove’s Red Hills of Home
title_full “In This Wound of Life …”: Dystopias and Dystopian Tropes in Chenjerai Hove’s Red Hills of Home
title_fullStr “In This Wound of Life …”: Dystopias and Dystopian Tropes in Chenjerai Hove’s Red Hills of Home
title_full_unstemmed “In This Wound of Life …”: Dystopias and Dystopian Tropes in Chenjerai Hove’s Red Hills of Home
title_short “In This Wound of Life …”: Dystopias and Dystopian Tropes in Chenjerai Hove’s Red Hills of Home
title_sort “in this wound of life …”: dystopias and dystopian tropes in chenjerai hove’s red hills of home
topic Literary dystopias
Zimbabwe’s independence, postcolonial conditions
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02564718.2013.856662
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