Black and female Essays

Tsitsi Dangarembga

Book - 2023

"In Black and Female, Tsitsi Dangarembga examines the legacy of imperialism on her own life and on every aspect of black embodied African life. This paradigm-shifting essay collection weaves the personal and political in an illuminating exploration of race and gender. Dangarembga recounts a painful separation from her parents as a toddler, connecting this experience to the ruptures caused in Africa by human trafficking and enslavement. She argues that, after independence, the ruling party in Zimbabwe only performed inclusion for women while silencing the work of self-actualized feminists. She describes her struggles to realize her ambitions in theater, film, and literature, laying out the long path to the publication of her novels. A...t once philosophical, intimate, and urgent, Black and Female is a powerful testimony of the pervasive and long-lasting effects of racism and patriarchy that provides an ultimately hopeful vision for change. Black feminists are "the status quo's worst nightmare." Dangarembga writes, "our conviction is deep, bolstered by a vivid imagination that reminds us that other realities are possible beyond the one that obtains.""--Publisher marketing.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

824.914/Dangarembga
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 824.914/Dangarembga Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Essays
Published
Minneapolis, Minnesota : Graywolf Press [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Tsitsi Dangarembga (author)
Item Description
"First published by Faber & Faber Limited, London"--title page verso.
Physical Description
158 pages ; 19 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781644452110
  • Introduction
  • Writing while black and female
  • Black, female and the superwoman black feminist
  • Decolonisation as revolutionary imagining.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

These incisive, impassioned essays by novelist Dangarembga (Nervous Conditions) confront the lingering effects of imperialism in Zimbabwe. She examines empire, racism, and misogyny through personal stories about growing up in what was then called Rhodesia and contrasts her experiences there with a stint she spent living with a foster family in Dover, England. In "Writing While Black and Female," Dangarembga remembers learning the power of language from its ability to produce action ("After adults spoke to each other, things happened: little children were left"), and relates how writing allows her to transcend racial and gender categories by building and affirming an identity independent of them. She examines Zimbabwe's pre- and post-colonial history of gender inequality, noting that colonial legislation treated adult women as minors and lamenting how as a child, her brother once felt compelled to ally himself with the "toxic masculinity" of their father by offering his belt to beat her with. Calling for "mental decolonisation," the author argues that Black feminists must play a crucial role in building a more just future because they "have experienced the more repressive edge of most demographic categories and not succumbed." Dangarembga's candid reflections and lyrical prose bring urgency to this thought-provoking argument for political and social equality. Readers won't want to miss this. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

This three-essay collection from Zimbabwean novelist Dangarembga (author of Nervous Conditions, The Book of Not, and the Booker-shortlisted This Mournable Body) looks at the legacy of colonialism and its effects on Black bodies. It partners well with fiction from authors such as Alice Walker and Toni Morrison on the exploitation of Black girls and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie on the dangers of a single narrative. The first essay discusses how Dangarembga's writing is an analysis of her personal and national history; the second shows how Zimbabwean society from the colonial to postcolonial has affected the position of women; the third states how decolonization must occur in the imaginary realm before society can actively engage in it. Dangarembga moves from a damage-centered narrative toward one of healing and reclamation. Her position as a scholar in a long line of people also dedicated to this work, whom she cites, paired with her life experience, has led to a powerful account of systemic injustice. VERDICT Dangarembga's collection is an essential addition to academic collections on race and gender. The moments where she shares her crisis over selfhood as a child and how that search for identity carried over into adulthood are some of the most powerful parts of the book.--Paige Pagan

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In these probing essays, Zimbabwean novelist and filmmaker Dangarembga examines the impacts of racism, colonialism, and patriarchy on her life and work. Born in the former British colony of Southern Rhodesia, she grew up in "a vicious society that constructed me as essentially lacking full humanity, needing but never able, as a result of being black-embodied, to attain the status of complete human." It was a world still shaped by the slave trade, which wrenched "the strongest and most able-bodied individuals in their communities" and upended traditional social and political structures. Even after gaining independence, the country suffered from the wounds of "imperial lust," including inequality, rule by a racial elite, and an entrenched patriarchal structure "particularly reluctant to recognise the achievement of Zimbabwean women in any sector that it does not control." As a young child, Dangarembga and her brother were left with a White foster family in Dover, while her parents furthered their studies in London. In England, disoriented and lonely, she first became aware of her Blackness. The author recounts her evolution as a feminist, beginning in college in Zimbabwe and the U.K. "Feminist theory," she writes, "showed me how I was constructed as a female person whose content and possibility was predetermined, and how my refusal to occupy that space was a form of rebellion, albeit a powerless one." She felt that powerlessness as she strived to get published and, after studying at the German Film and Television Academy in Berlin, faced marginalization in the film industry as well. As a Black feminist, Dangarembga feels part of "a small, often embattled group" struggling to be heard in a society that wants to silence her. In her work, she seeks "to raise mountains, hills, escarpments and rocky outcrops over the gouges in my history, my societies and their attendant spirits." A well-informed, biting analysis of the legacy of empire. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.