Buch, Englisch, 273 Seiten, Format (B × H): 148 mm x 210 mm, Gewicht: 381 g
Hegemony, Identity and a Contested Postcolony
Buch, Englisch, 273 Seiten, Format (B × H): 148 mm x 210 mm, Gewicht: 381 g
Reihe: Contemporary Performance InterActions
ISBN: 978-3-030-74596-7
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
The voices that are represented in this collection come from various parts of the world and express the views of practitioners and scholars who have all had first-hand experience working in Zimbabwean theatre from the last days of Rhodesia to Zimbabwe. The collection views the long continuum of developments in local theatre history as a case of the intrusive hegemonies that came with colonial Rhodesia as a conquest society, and localised identities in the form of the persistence of indigenous and syncretic popular forms. With time, all these came together to constitute the makings of a contested post-colony in contemporary theatre practice in Zimbabwe. The primary interest of scholars who are represented here is located at the intersection of political, cultural and performative discourses and the flow of Zimbabwean history. The focus, moreover, is not only on the history of performance cultures in postcolonial Zimbabwe - it extends its critical gaze to include the history of political ideas that gave rise to cultural contestation in the field of theatre and performance.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
1. Introduction; Samuel Ravengai and Owen Seda.- 2. Chapter 1: Colonial Zimbabwean Theatre, Cultural Production and the Interplay with Rhodesian Power and Discourse; Samuel Ravengai.- 3. Chapter 2: Negotiating Whitehood: Identity and Resistance in Rhodesian Theatre 1950-1980; Kelvin Chikonzo and Samuel Ravengai.- 4. Chapter 3: Transformative Complexity of Found Objects in Devised Zimbabwean Theatre; Tafadzwa Mlenga and Nehemiah Chivandikwa.- 5. Chapter 4: Amakhosi Theatre Training (1990-2000): An Exercise in Syncretism; Nkululeko Sibanda and Julia Yule.- 6. Chapter 5: Contestation in Post-Colonial Drama – Residual and Emergent Consciousness in Zimbabwean Theatre at Independence: NTO and ZACT; Owen Seda.- 7. Chapter 6: Creating Counter-Public Sphere(s): Performance in Zimbabwe between the Influence of Mugabe and Western NGOs; Julius Heinicke.- 8. Chapter 7: ‘I was never a white girl and I do not want to be a white girl’: Albinism, Youth Theatre and Disability Politics in Contemporary Zimbabwe; Chiedza Chinhanu, Nehemiah Chivandikwa and Owen Seda.- 9. Chapter 8: Popular Theatre as a Struggle for Identity and Representation in Matabeleland: 1980 to the Present; Mandlenkosi Mpofu, Cletus Moyo and Nkululeko Sibanda.- 10. Chapter 9: Harnessing the Whirlwind: Hybridity, Memory, and Crisis in Theatre during Zimbabwe’s Operation Murambatsvina; Joy L Wrolson.- 11. Chapter 10: Towards a Democratic Protest Theatre in Zimbabwe: Vhitori Entertainment’s Protest Revolutionaries (2012); Kelvin Chikonzo.- 12. Chapter 11: Who is Indigenous? Freeing Indigeneity from a Time Warp; Pedzisai Maedza.