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The Place of Tears (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R4,256
Discovery Miles 42 560
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The Place of Tears (Hardcover)
Series: International Library of African Studies, v. 17
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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THIS IS AN NJR - NOT JACKET BLURB, DO NOT USE IT THIS RAW FORM
-This new and original work is the only recent monographic
treatment of the Zimbabwean novel and its political implications.
An earlier one by Veit-Wild (1992) has not been updated, and other,
such as that by Zhuwarara (2001), are not easily available outside
Zimbabwe. The author resided in Zimbabwe for almost a decade and
has visited the country regularly in the last five years. She has
published extensively on Zimbabwean literature, and brings to her
work a deep contextual richness as well as theoretical
sophistication. Thoroughly up-to-date, the book examines all the
published novels of the recently-deceased Yvonne Vera (d. April
2005) as well as major novels of five other
internationally-acclaimed Zimbabwean writers, including Tsitsi
Dangarembga and Chenjerai Hove. It does so against a political
backdrop which goes right up to the March 2005 parliamentary
elections. The book provides a modern and original historical
account of post-independence Zimbabwean writing and its
relationship to history and politics. The critical investigation
focuses on fictional representations of space-time - which links
the book the tragically topical Zimbabwean issue of land. Dr
Primorac employs a form of literary and cultural theory reminiscent
of Bakhtinian analysis, but drawn at length from East European
theoretical sources. She investigates what the novels have to say
about the Zimbabwean condition, and makes a sophisticated link
between ideas about space-time and novelistic ideologies. More than
that, drawing a parallel with the experience of Eastern Europe, she
shows how the novel itself breaks out of the confines of the
quasi-Marxist analysis which still holds sway in Zimbabwe. As such,
the Zimbabwean novel is itself a source of hope in that troubled
land. Ranka Primorac has degrees from the universities of Zagreb,
Zimbabwe and Nottingham Trent. She has taught Africa-related
courses at several institutions of higher learning in Britain,
including the University of Cambridge and New York University in
London. She is interested in non-western writing and cultures,
theoretical approaches to the novel and the narrative production of
space-time. Her co-edited volume, Versions of Zimbabwe: New
Approaches to Literature and Culture was published in 2005 by
Weaver Press in Harare.
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