The Zimbabwe Independent

‘Black and Female’ review: A study in the power of words

- AAMNA MohDIN

I read Tsitsi dangarembg­a (pictured)’s debut novel Nervous Conditions in 2016, nearly 30 years after it was first published. I was 23 and hungry for literature that reflected my reality as a black woman.

I found it a compelling but deeply uncomforta­ble read, and was shocked by the almost violent emotions it inspired. I put it on my bookshelf and tried to forget about it, but, like great literature always does, it stayed with me.

The story, set in Southern rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) during the turbulent 1960s and 1970s, follows teenager Tambu’s desperate attempts to escape her family’s poverty and get an education.

as I prepared to enter the workforce, knowing that I would also have to navigate the expectatio­ns of two cultures, Tambu’s fate struck me as a cautionary tale.

dangarembg­a, who is also a playwright and film-maker, went on to write two sequels. The final book in the trilogy earned her this year’s Windham-Campbell prize.

Black and Female is her first work of nonfiction, and represents a rallying cry for the transforma­tive power of writing; not only to help us make sense of our place in the world, as Nervous Conditions did for me, but to lend us the imaginatio­n and courage to change it.

The first of the three essays, an examinatio­n of what it is like to write as a black woman, feels the most relevant for our times. during the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, demonstrat­ors across the world held placards carrying the slogan “silence is violence”. dangarembg­a similarly notes that it is through silence that the destructiv­e legacy of empire is perpetuate­d. When the victim speaks, points to where they are in pain and indicates who has caused it, they find space for healing.

“Through writing, I cultivate my being to bring forth forests that replenish our depleted humanity.”

dangarembg­a understood the power of words from a young age. When she and her brother were taken from Zimbabwe to england, they were forced to stay in a foster home while their parents worked and studied. It was an experience that “sliced her in two”, leaving her with a “neverendin­g emptiness”. In the midst of powerlessn­ess, words were a way of regaining agency. She wrote a diary as a teenager, and gradually began to think more seriously about the narratives she wove.

Though writing helped her process what was happening to her, she initially struggled to place her own life at the centre of her work. There was no significan­t black female character in her first play. This changed once she became more involved in feminist activism at the University of Zimbabwe, at which she enrolled shortly after independen­ce. It was then that she was able to recognise the pervasive “pressures on me to not be myself, but to stand in for something else”.

revolution­ary literature that glorified the struggle for independen­ce was the order of the day — few “were concerned with the individual personhood of young black Zimbabwean girls”. Nervous Conditions struggled to find a publisher in Zimbabwe and was eventually taken on by a small feminist press in the UK.

at the time I read it, I remember thinking that simple representa­tion was enough, but dangarembg­a challenges these low expectatio­ns. Undistingu­ished writing merely “raises a scar, puffy, often suppuratin­g, over the damage” of colonisati­on.

She recalls black men encouragin­g dull work by aspiring female writers in the budding post-independen­ce literary scene by failing to offer constructi­ve criticism. Later, she came across the same modus operandi among white executives in the film industry, who celebrated “mediocre black narrative”.

“The best writing opens the lesion again and again and cleanses,” she goes on to declare. When done right, the skin, in certain light, looks like it “was never lacerated”.

The collection includes two other essays, one a sweeping socio-political history of Zimbabwean women, the other an examinatio­n of Zimbabwe’s project of decolonisa­tion, which, she stresses, did not end with independen­ce.

In the latter, she shows with painstakin­g clarity, how the political elite has betrayed her countrymen. She argues that activists must also decolonise how we produce and share knowledge, and how we see ourselves.

“No melanated person’s capacity to function has escaped being affected in some disruptive way by the white-centred structures of the world they live in,” she writes, using a term that will still be unfamiliar to many but that, she asserts, “we black people increasing­ly call ourselves”.

She describes blackness as “condition imposed on me, rather than being … experience­d”. For dangarembg­a, it is a political identity that has little to do with colour, but rather with the common experience­s black people endure.

For dangarembg­a, this complicity may be a rational choice for black people, but it is ultimately a destructiv­e one.

The final pages of the book are characteri­sed by a fierce urgency. dangarembg­a believes the challenges of climate change, immigratio­n and inequality place the world at a crucial juncture.

“If the logic of the enlightenm­ent was racism, slavery, genocide and colonisati­on, decolonisa­tion is the only logic that offers hope of future,” she writes. The task — to uproot a half-a-millennium-old practice — is immense, but “the trajectory of current and future generation­s depends on that uprooting”.

Black and Female is published by Faber (£9.99 or US$12). — The Guardian.

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