At home in the world? Re-framing Zambia's literature in English
At home in the world? Re-framing Zambia's literature in English
This article seeks to problematise and question the conventional critical stance on Zambia's writing in English (which casts it as aesthetically sub-standard and ‘underdeveloped’), by recasting it as the embodiment of a local literariness of crisis. For much of its history, written literary texts from Zambia have been produced by a tiny cultural elite, which was prevented (by economic and political circumstances) from specialising in, or professionalising, the practice of producing English-language literature. Furthermore, the economic, political and cultural determinants of Zambia's decolonisation and its postcolonial history have given rise to a body of work in which the aesthetic functioning of texts is often integrated with pronounced non-aesthetic functionality. This is to say that, in this part of south-eastern Africa, the presence of nationalist pedagogy in literary works produced immediately after independence (which will surprise no one) frequently shades into other kinds of pragmatism, which may entail religious and spiritual moralism – and that this kind of literariness continues today, when Pentecostal Christianity exerts a strong influence on all kinds of local texts and meanings. Relying in part on terminologies related to world literature and new cosmopolitanisms, I argue that such texts should, nevertheless, be regarded as participating in a specifically shaped system of literariness and literary value, and illustrate my argument with readings of strategically selected moments in the history of Zambian fiction in English: the path-breaking work of Lusaka's New Writers' Group and novels by Dominic Mulaisho and Grieve Sibale
575-591
Primorac, Ranka
8e175d18-8ea8-4228-8637-671427202b10
Primorac, Ranka
8e175d18-8ea8-4228-8637-671427202b10
Primorac, Ranka
(2014)
At home in the world? Re-framing Zambia's literature in English.
Journal of Southern African Studies, 40 (3), .
(doi:10.1080/03057070.2014.909257).
Abstract
This article seeks to problematise and question the conventional critical stance on Zambia's writing in English (which casts it as aesthetically sub-standard and ‘underdeveloped’), by recasting it as the embodiment of a local literariness of crisis. For much of its history, written literary texts from Zambia have been produced by a tiny cultural elite, which was prevented (by economic and political circumstances) from specialising in, or professionalising, the practice of producing English-language literature. Furthermore, the economic, political and cultural determinants of Zambia's decolonisation and its postcolonial history have given rise to a body of work in which the aesthetic functioning of texts is often integrated with pronounced non-aesthetic functionality. This is to say that, in this part of south-eastern Africa, the presence of nationalist pedagogy in literary works produced immediately after independence (which will surprise no one) frequently shades into other kinds of pragmatism, which may entail religious and spiritual moralism – and that this kind of literariness continues today, when Pentecostal Christianity exerts a strong influence on all kinds of local texts and meanings. Relying in part on terminologies related to world literature and new cosmopolitanisms, I argue that such texts should, nevertheless, be regarded as participating in a specifically shaped system of literariness and literary value, and illustrate my argument with readings of strategically selected moments in the history of Zambian fiction in English: the path-breaking work of Lusaka's New Writers' Group and novels by Dominic Mulaisho and Grieve Sibale
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e-pub ahead of print date: 23 May 2014
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English
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Local EPrints ID: 372831
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/372831
ISSN: 1465-3893
PURE UUID: d4c806dd-5908-421c-b68f-b399bf963e25
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Date deposited: 22 Dec 2014 11:38
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:33
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