GRAHAM LANG’S DEPICTION OF THE ZIMBABWEAN CRISIS, MIGRATION AND IDENTITY IN PLACE OF BIRTH (2006)

Authors

  • Terrence Musanga Midlands State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2078-9785/2846

Keywords:

Zimbabwean crisis, colonialism, identity, migration, white Zimbabwean fiction, land reform programme

Abstract

This paper explores Graham Lang’s depiction of the Zimbabwean crisis, migration and identity in Place of Birth (2006). The text, by foregrounding the experiences of a white Zimbabwean family’s attempts to survive the crisis, offers a hitherto marginalised discourse/narrative in Zimbabwean literature, which largely focuses on the experiences of black Zimbabweans. Lang’s understanding of the nexus between the Zimbabwean crisis, migration and identity is chiefly centred on the Zimbabwean government’s land reform programme. However, Lang’s depiction of the Zimbabwean crisis in general and the land reform programme in particular largely resonate with colonial perceptions of the African, which project him/her as inherently atavistic in nature.

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Published

2017-06-23

How to Cite

Musanga, Terrence. 2014. “GRAHAM LANG’S DEPICTION OF THE ZIMBABWEAN CRISIS, MIGRATION AND IDENTITY IN PLACE OF BIRTH (2006)”. Imbizo 5 (2):61-71. https://doi.org/10.25159/2078-9785/2846.

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