Tavengwa Gwekwerere, John Mambambo, Martin Magidi, Reggemore Marongedze
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
While the advent of Zimbabwe’s independence in 1980 with Robert Mugabe as founding prime minister was largely received as the best outcome of the liberation struggle of the 1970s and as the foundation upon which a prosperous nation could be built, the euphoria did not last long. Over the years, Mugabe’s rule became increasingly authoritarian to the extent that his ouster by Emmerson Mnangagwa through the coup of November 2017 would momentarily occasion a new sense of hope which the latter’s regime quickly appropriated to configure itself as Zimbabwe’s ‘Second Republic’/‘New Dispensation’. These identities are pervasive in multiple state-centric spaces that are burdened with the responsibility to frame both Mugabe’s removal from office and his replacement by Mnangagwa’s as inexorable. However, it is in the post-2017 Chief Shumba Hwenje song that ‘Second Republic’/‘New Dispensation’ identities have more traction as tropes of eventual political transition in Zimbabwe. This article utilises Afrocentric ideas on the role of art in cultivating truth, justice, harmony, balance, order, reciprocity and propriety to problematise ‘Second Republic’/‘New Dispensation’ identities implied in purposively sampled post-2017 Chief Shumba Hwenje songs’ representations of Mnangagwa as a patriot, a revolutionary and a liberator. It instrumentalises the post-2017 Chief Shumba Hwenje song as the most recent manifestation of the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) song and explores the ways in which the selected songs’ representations of Mnangagwa reminisce Mugabe-era politics of violence, state capture, patronage, exclusion, indispensability, polarisation, entitlement and poverty of accountability. The article suggests that while the songs discussed endeavour to depict Mnangagwa favourably, the ease with which they also portray him as steeped in various components of Mugabeist politics contradict the very claim to newness that the post-Mugabe regime articulates through ‘Second Republic’/‘New Dispensation’ identities.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Asian and African Studies (JAAS) was founded in 1965 to further research and study on Asia and Africa. JAAS is a peer reviewed journal of area studies recognised for consistent scholarly contributions to cutting-edge issues and debates. The journal welcomes articles, research notes, and book reviews that focus on the dynamics of global change and development of Asian and African nations, societies, cultures, and the global community. Published articles cover: -development and change -technology and communication -globalization -public administration -politics -economy -education -health, wealth, and welfare -poverty and growth -humanities -sociology -political science -linguistics -economics JAAS adheres to a double-blind reviewing policy in which the identity of both the reviewer and author are always concealed from both parties. Decisions on manuscripts will be taken as rapidly as possible. However, while it is hoped that a decision can be made in 6-8 weeks, the refereeing process makes it impossible to predict the length of time that will be required to process any given manuscript.