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      Abjection in Dambudzo Marechera's The House of Hunger

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          Abstract

          In a description of nationalist poems about "a golden age of black heroes; of myths and legends and sprites" (Marechera 74), the narrator of The House of Hunger (1978) observes that these themes are the "exposed veins dripping through the body of the poems." In this article we extend this observation to argue that, metaphorically on display in Marechera's novella itself, are the "exposed veins dripping through the body of the [text]" (74). The novella's themes include colonialism, social destitution, violence, state-sanctioned oppression, identity struggles, poverty, dislocation, disillusionment and anger, all of which are appropriately imaged in Marechera's visceral metaphor of the pain and violence implicit in the literary text. More specifically, corporeal imagery emphasises the unnamed narrator's troubled existence, suffusing The House of Hunger in a manner that elicits disgust and horror, thus encouraging the reader's affective response to the representation of the colonial condition. This article illuminates Marechera's seeming obsession with corporeality by providing a postcolonial and psychoanalytic reading, focussing in particular on Julia Kristeva's theory of abjection. Although critics have objected to reading African texts through the lens of psychoanalysis, the article sets out to address this concern, noting the importance of theorists like Frantz Fanon and Joshua D. Esty in justifying psychoanalytic readings of African literature, and drawing resonant parallels between Kristevan theory and Marechera's perspective on the colonial condition of Zimbabwe (Rhodesia) in the 1970s.

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          Most cited references9

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          "Abjection and Compassion: Affective Corporeality in Patrick White's Fiction

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            "The Embrace of Exclusion: The Collective and the Corporeal in Dambudzo Marechera's 'House of Hunger'"

            Alan Ward (2013)
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              "The House of Hunger"

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
                Journal
                tvl
                Tydskrif vir Letterkunde
                Tydskr. letterkd.
                Tydskrif vir Letterkunde Association, Department of Afrikaans, University of Pretoria (Pretoria, Gauteng, South Africa )
                0041-476X
                2309-9070
                2018
                : 55
                : 2
                : 104-119
                Affiliations
                [02] orgnameUniversity of Johannesburg orgdiv1Department of English
                [01] orgnameUniversity of Johannesburg
                Article
                S0041-476X2018000200008
                10.17159/2309-9070/tvl.v.55i2.1884
                09a315a5-20ef-4850-9ab0-ff30a00ce2d3

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

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                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 29, Pages: 16
                Product

                SciELO South Africa


                African literature,corporeality,postcolonialism,psychoanalysis,abjection

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