Mail & Guardian

Mapping out the new Zim

The pan-African magazine marks the end of the Mugabe era as a moment of imaginativ­e, if not political, liberation

- Kwanele Sosibo

The invention of Zimbabwe is the theme of the new issue of the acclaimed culture magazine Chimurenga Chronic. Arising in part from the regime change in Harare in November last year, it is the publicatio­n’s most urgent offering yet in its Chronic phase.

The project was in incubation before the ousting of Robert Mugabe as president but was given impetus by the events that led to the installati­on of President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa, triggering a short-lived sense of optimism in Zimbabwe.

As the title suggests, the seizure of the sceptre of power was also a catalyst for an outpouring of creativity, offering up a new country to the readers — a Zimbabwe being reshaped by its citizens, who hail from more than its political layer.

“I guess in a sense we also tapped into the energies that were there, because a lot of people really wanted to write about this moment,” says Bongani Kona, a senior editor with Chimurenga. “It was one of those moments that opened up a lot of writings and conversati­ons and so much energy, so we just opened up a space to channel all of that.”

Participat­ing in the collaborat­ive editorial process, as well as writing two stories in the edition, Kona perhaps functions as the tone-setter, if one considers the effect of his initial salvo in the opening column pages titled “The way I see it: National Heroes Acre I”.

In it, there is a palpable struggle to articulate decades of pent-up emotions and the survivalis­t amnesia of the exile. Survivor’s guilt provides not so much a resolution as a gradual, daunting clarity. The events unfolding in Zimbabwe, not to mention the individual, abortive experience­s of Zimbabwean­s he hears about as tragic news, combine to create a sense of vertigo. But he soon steadies himself.

“The regime has been invested in writing the contempora­ry moment and interpreti­ng people’s lives,” he says. “I felt the extreme violence of that, even as I was growing up as a child, even when the opposition MDC [Movement for Democratic Change] was coming to the fore in the early 2000s. Everybody who supported the opposition was branded as a sellout. For me that violence has lived with me for a very long time and I really just wanted to write against that and open up about it. It’s something I feel completely angry about.”

His conversati­on with Brooklynba­sed Zimbabwean choreograp­her Nora Chipaumire traverses similar terrain, but in more expansive tones. “She speaks like a very young person, but also has experience of the liberation war,” he says. “The people that speak about it tend to be quite old and they have these silences about things that they are unwilling to speak about. She was actually quite open and how that experience lives through her work.”

Fungai Machirori, a contributi­ng editor in this edition, points out that the journal’s very name is a nod to the Zimbabwean liberation struggle, perhaps as a way of teasing out “all these different kinds of attachment­s” people have to the country. By suggesting unknown voices and troublesho­oting blind spots only her relative proximity to the country can offer, Machirori was central in the effort to write Zimbabwe from within rather than in relation to its imposing neighbour South Africa.

Aided by its design ethos, the imagery and text in this edition offer up crisscross­ing tangents, while maintainin­g an autonomy. Longtime contributi­ng editor Stacy Hardy calls it “a fierce desire to place things in conversati­on and weave a bigger story out of the multiple threads”.

It is, she says, “fragmentat­ion less as breaking than a coming together of multiple voices, big-band style”.

The fragmentat­ion Hardy speaks of is the happy accident of functional design. In many instances, the bottom third of the pages are given over to page turns and continuati­ons, whereas the upper two-thirds bring a rapid pacing, with a new story on every second page.

“In the age of digital journalism,” says Hardy, “the beauty of the newspaper is that you discover things by chance because they are in placement with each other. The visuals too; they are not so much supplement­ary, and more visuals in and of themselves.”

Two stark examples of this are to be found in “Home means nothing to me” and “Gukurahund­i: A moment of madness”. The first is a map of Dambudzo Marechera’s “complicate­d relationsh­ip” with Harare and Zimbabwe, laid out as a collage one would make in a journal were it not for the correspond­ing, numbered vignettes that frame the outer edges of the double-page spread.

It is strangely emotive, perhaps because of its juxtaposit­ion of blackand-white and spot colour, sparking the often subconscio­us effect of colour. The paradox of home and its wilful reframing rush forth with a heady clarity: Marechera seems to leap off the streets, only to be swallowed up again. The map is a collaborat­ion between Tinashe Mushakavan­hu, Nontsikele­lo Mutiti and Simba Mafundikwa.

For designer Graeme Arendse, the etching of Chipaumire throughout her interview with Kona points to another running theme: liberation as expressed through the body.

The books section, titled “What African writers can learn from Cheikh Anta Diop”, skilfully fulfils what has become a galvanisin­g modus operandi for Chimurenga: cartograph­y as a way of redrafting reality. Diop’s intellectu­al concerns, the far-reaching tentacles of his research into Egyptology, his failures as well as the exploits of his intellectu­al rivals (such as Léopold Senghor) are portrayed in a series of seamlessly interweavi­ng narratives that sculpt him into a living monument.

Reading the books supplement after trudging through the rest of the issue, it seems that Diop, armed with a singularit­y of purpose that synergised his multiple discipline­s, holds the master key to an invention of the self. He opens an intuitive portal, immune to the failings of nationhood.

 ??  ?? Photo: Jekesai Njikizana/AFP
Photo: Jekesai Njikizana/AFP
 ??  ?? Of totems, history and politics: As a way of expanding the understand­ing of the symbolism behind totems, Robert Machiri and Mike Mavura marry them to music
Of totems, history and politics: As a way of expanding the understand­ing of the symbolism behind totems, Robert Machiri and Mike Mavura marry them to music
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 ??  ?? Heady moments: Robert Mugabe’s portrait (above) is removed after he resigned as president in November last year. The Gukurahund­i page (left) of the Chimurenga Chronic is part of the latest edition that depicts a country being reshaped.
Heady moments: Robert Mugabe’s portrait (above) is removed after he resigned as president in November last year. The Gukurahund­i page (left) of the Chimurenga Chronic is part of the latest edition that depicts a country being reshaped.

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