They Called You Dambudzo

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A01=Flora Veit-Wild
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black ghetto in Rhodesia
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=BM
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Charles Mungoshi
Chimurenga
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Dambudzo Marechera
death of a writer
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expatriates in Southern Africa
Harare International Book Fair
HIV/AIDS
HIVAIDS
honesty and courage in memoir writing
inaugural lecture
interracial sexuality
Kommunistischer Bund Westdeutschland
Lake Mcllwaine
Language_English
Lewis Nkosi
lifewriting
literary agency
literary legacy
literary non-fiction
literary writing in a foreign language
lyrical prose
Maoist expatriates
Marechera and children
Marechera and Mugabe
miming with children
Musaemura Zimunya
New College Oxford
Nurnberg
oil crisis in Zimbabwe in 1983
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poetic modernism in Zimbabwe
post-independent Zimbabwe
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Raffingora
scholarship and personal experience
second person narrative
sexuality and violence
Sir William Hayter
softlaunch
split persona
Stanley Nyamfukudza
student revolt in West Berlin
the drunken poet
University of Zimbabwe
Vumba Mountains
Werner Kilian as German ambassador in Zimbabwe
Wiesbaden
Zimbabwe Publishing House (ZPH)

Product details

  • ISBN 9781847013293
  • Weight: 382g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 06 May 2022
  • Publisher: James Currey
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Compelling memoir of Flora Veit-Wild and her relationship with the Zimbabwean novelist, poet, playwright, and essayist Dambudzo Marechera, one of Africa's most innovative and subversive writers and a significant voice in contemporary world literature. How shall I tell our story? I hear your voice ringing in mine. I struggle to disentangle a dense tapestry of memories. One thread will be caught up in another. Early images will embrace later ones. My gaze will often be filtered through your eyes, your poems. In the end I will not always be able to tell the original from the reflection. Just as you wrote, Time's fingers on the piano / play emotion into motion / the dancers in the looking glass never recognise us as their originals. This book is a memoir with a 'double heartbeat'. At its centre is the author's relationship with the late Zimbabwean writer, Dambudzo Marechera, whose award-winning book The House of Hunger marked him as a powerful, disruptive, perhaps prophetic voice in African literature. Flora Veit-Wild is internationally recognised for her significant contribution to preserving Marechera's legacy. What is less known about Marechera and Veit-Wild is that they had an intense, personal and sexual relationship. This memoir explores this: the couple's first encounter in 1983, amidst the euphoria of the newly independent Zimbabwe; the tumultuous months when the homeless writer moved in with his lover and her family; the bouts of creativity once he had his own flat followed by feelings of abandonment; the increasing despair about a love affair that could not stand up against reality; and the illness of the writer and his death of HIV related pneumonia in August 1987. What follows are the struggles Flora went through once Dambudzo had died. On the one hand she became the custodian of his life and work, on the other she had to live with her own HIV infection and the ensuing threats to her health. Jacana: Southern Africa
Flora Veit-Wild is Emerita Professor of African literatures at Humboldt University, Berlin. She lived in Harare/Zimbabwe from 1983 to 1993 and became known for her work on Zimbabwean literature and as literary executor and biographer of Dambudzo Marechera and a founder member of the Zimbabwe Women Writers. Her numerous publications include studies of body, madness, sexuality and gender in Anglophone and Francophone African writing as well as code-switching and linguistic innovation in Shona literature.

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