Part of Zimbabwe’s socio-political and economic crisis of the past decade can be easily traced back to contestations about the place of Zimbabwe’s war of liberation (1966 – 1979) in constructions of political legitimacy. Since, for obvious reasons, the liberation war and its memory are inseparable from power and hegemonic control in the postcolony, the narrative of the war in Zimbabwe has long been a preserve of powerful and often male political leaders. This means that female narratives of the war are subordinated and with them, women’s roles in the war and post-independence power politics. This paper deploys Maria Pia Lara’s theory of women’s life writings as inherently ‘emancipatory’ and ‘disclosive’ to explore Fay Chung’s counter-heg...
A discursive and textual analysis of the Zimbabwean coup through a lens of postcolonial theory. The ...
ii, 261 leaves ; 28 cm.Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 247-261).This t...
In memorializing the past, Zimbabwe’s national and cultural discourses have more often than not dr...
Because masculinities and femininities are socially and culturally constructed, they often play sign...
The post independence Zimbabwe s entrenched politics of self and other dates back to the Chimurenga ...
The article is an exegesis of the interface of liberation war history and democracy in the Zimbabwea...
Fay Chung grew up in a Chinese family in Rhodesia in the 1950s and 1960s. She studied education and ...
The article explores Zimbabwean women’s voices about women’s participation in Zimbabwe’s struggle fo...
The ideology of femocracy is so entrenched in Zimbabwean politics that it has become a tradition. It...
Bibliography: leaves 290-311.xiii, 354, 14 leaves : ill. (chiefly col.) ; 30 cm.This study investiga...
Women played a range of complex roles during the liberation struggle in Zimbabwe between 1961 and 19...
This paper explores the contingent nature of war-time developments in gender relations, focusing par...
Taking an interdisciplinary approach, this research explores Zimbabwean literary and other cultural ...
The article raises insights on the politics of representation, nation and nationalism in Zimbabwe, a...
This article is concerned with the mnemonics of colonial violence and how Chimurenga War during Zimb...
A discursive and textual analysis of the Zimbabwean coup through a lens of postcolonial theory. The ...
ii, 261 leaves ; 28 cm.Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 247-261).This t...
In memorializing the past, Zimbabwe’s national and cultural discourses have more often than not dr...
Because masculinities and femininities are socially and culturally constructed, they often play sign...
The post independence Zimbabwe s entrenched politics of self and other dates back to the Chimurenga ...
The article is an exegesis of the interface of liberation war history and democracy in the Zimbabwea...
Fay Chung grew up in a Chinese family in Rhodesia in the 1950s and 1960s. She studied education and ...
The article explores Zimbabwean women’s voices about women’s participation in Zimbabwe’s struggle fo...
The ideology of femocracy is so entrenched in Zimbabwean politics that it has become a tradition. It...
Bibliography: leaves 290-311.xiii, 354, 14 leaves : ill. (chiefly col.) ; 30 cm.This study investiga...
Women played a range of complex roles during the liberation struggle in Zimbabwe between 1961 and 19...
This paper explores the contingent nature of war-time developments in gender relations, focusing par...
Taking an interdisciplinary approach, this research explores Zimbabwean literary and other cultural ...
The article raises insights on the politics of representation, nation and nationalism in Zimbabwe, a...
This article is concerned with the mnemonics of colonial violence and how Chimurenga War during Zimb...
A discursive and textual analysis of the Zimbabwean coup through a lens of postcolonial theory. The ...
ii, 261 leaves ; 28 cm.Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 247-261).This t...
In memorializing the past, Zimbabwe’s national and cultural discourses have more often than not dr...