Month: June 2014

  • KAHARI'S 50-YEAR ODYSSEY IN LITERATURE

    Maurice Vambe, George Kahari and Memory Chirere (Photo Credit: KwaChirere) “Nothing good can come out of Zimbabwe,” has become the byword of the day. We lack an aggressive estimation of our potential as a nation.Pessimism runs the tapestry of our national outlook. We justify this self-deprecation by playing second fiddle to others on many platforms.…

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  • PRESIDENTS WHO WERE FAVOURED BY THE MUSES

    Kwame Nkrumah Poetry with a nationalist accent is one of the most enduring monuments of African literature.  A thread of love letters – impassioned, potent, poetic endearments to Africa – was unwound at the high tide of liberation. Europe has commissioned poet laureates to give her official occasions the rhyme factor. In Africa, a coterie of…

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  • RECOLLECTIONS OF JOURNALISM IN THE LINE OF FIRE

    Creatures at the Top Book: Creatures at the Top Author: Stephen Mpofu Publisher: Spiderwize (2012) Stephen Mpofu belongs to that rare breed of Zimbabwe’s pioneer journalists for whom the newsroom was a vocation not a default option. Back in the day, journalism did not occur naturally on the inventory of professions available to blacks. By…

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  • RANGER'S ENGAGEMENT WITH ZIMBABWE'S NATIONALIST POLITICS

    Writing Revolt Book: Writing Revolt Author: Terence Ranger Publisher: Weaver Press (2013) Terence Ranger’s latest memoir “Writing Revolt: An Engagement with African Nationalism, 1957-67” is a vastly riveting account which tags the historian in the mid-century revolutionary ferment. “Of the making of many books about Zimbabwe there seems to be no end,” Ranger observes in…

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