Description

Book Synopsis

Zimbabwe’s crisis since 2000 has produced a dramatic global scattering of people. This volume investigates this enforced dispersal, and the processes shaping the emergence of a new "diaspora" of Zimbabweans abroad, focusing on the most important concentrations in South Africa and in Britain. Not only is this the first book on the diasporic connections created through Zimbabwe’s multifaceted crisis, but it also offers an innovative combination of research on the political, economic, cultural and legal dimensions of movement across borders and survival thereafter with a discussion of shifting identities and cultural change. It highlights the ways in which new movements are connected to older flows, and how displacements across physical borders are intimately linked to the reworking of conceptual borders in both sending and receiving states. The book is essential reading for researchers/students in migration, diaspora and postcolonial literary studies.



Trade Review

The ambiguity in [this] text is a breath of fresh air and the harbinger of something new in a world seemingly dominated by the imperatives of nation, ‘race’, ‘ethnicity’, and heteronormativity. · JRAI

"Anyone who has witnessed the plight and sense of desperation of Zimbabweans who have fled Robert Mugabe’s violent regime of terror, and its consequent economic meltdown, should read this book. Its different chapters inform, document, analyse and evoke with great sensitivity and conceptual clarity some of the legal, economic and emotional struggles and predicaments Zimbabweans in the diaspora face. The outcome is a diverse and complex picture of this new African diaspora's dispersal within Southern Africa and the West. The book dispels the view that modern diasporas are no longer sites of suffering, exclusion and discrimination, or that their members no longer yearn for a lost homeland. Impressively well informed and up to date both factually and theoretically, the book should be read by all those interested in the new African diasporas. It will undoubtedly constitute a baseline for any future research on the Zimbabwean diaspora." · Pnina Werbner, Keele University

"The papers in this volume cast new light on Zimbabwe's difficult recent history through the experiences of the large numbers of Zimbabweans now settled across the world, mostly in South Africa and Britain. Especially in South Africa, building popular support for the Zimbabwean diaspora is an urgent political challenge, and one for which this book provides plenty of resources. At the same time it offers a creative and intelligent contribution to the wider academic literature on diasporas." · Prof. Jennifer Robinson, UCL

“The volume is to be welcomed as a considerable addition to the growing literature on African migrants and refugees in Europe and elsewhere. It brings together research conducted by a range of scholars from different disciplines and of different backgrounds, including many from Zimbabwe itself…Comparing the Zimbabwean 'diaspora' in depth in two important and different contexts (the UK and South Africa) gives it significant added value.” · Prof. Ralph Grillo, University of Sussex

“This rich collection of case studies reveals the complexities of Zimbabweaness and diasporic identities and demonstrates how these particular diasporas are inserted into layers of interpretative schemes both in South Africa and UK. This focus on historical intertwining and the layers of interpretation that it creates, is an important contribution to Diaspora studies and studies on transnationalism that tend merely to explore contemporary issues of exclusion/marginalization or ‘political opportunity structures’ in the host society.” · Prof. Simon Turner, Danish Institute for International Studies



Table of Contents

Editors’ Preface
Introduction

Chapter 1. The Making of Zimbabwe’s New Diaspora
JoAnn McGregor

PART I: ZIMBABWEAN DIASPORIC COMMUNITIES IN SOUTH AFRICA

Chapter 2. Makwerekwere: Migration, Citizenship and Identity among Zimbabweans in South Africa
James Muzondidya

Chapter 3. Zimbabwean Farmworkers in Limpopo Province, South Africa
Blair Rutherford

Chapter 4.The Politics of Legal Status for Zimbabweans in South Africa
Norma Kriger

PART II: THE CULTURAL POLITICS OF SURVIVAL IN BRITAIN

Chapter 5. Zimbabwean Transnational Diaspora Politics in Britain
Dominic Pasura

Chapter 6. Diaspora and Dignity: Navigating and Contesting Civic Exclusion in the UK
JoAnn McGregor

Chapter 7. Burial at Home? Negotiating Death in the Diaspora and Harare
Beacon Mbiba

Chapter 8. Maintaining Transnational Families: HIV Positive Zimbabwean Women’s Narratives of Obligation and Support
Martha Chinouya

PART III: DIASPORIC IDENTITIES AND TRANSNATIONAL MEDIA

Chapter 9. Debating 'Zimbabweanness' in Diasporic Internet Forums: Technologies of Freedom?
Winston Mano and Wendy Willems

Chapter 10. Rhodesians Never Die? The Zimbabwe Crisis and the Revival of Rhodesian Discourse
Ranka Primorac

Chapter 11. Exile and the Internet: Ndebele and Mixed-Race Diaspora ‘Homes’ Online
Clayton Peel

Chapter 12. One Dandelion Seedhead
Brian Chikwava, introduced by Ranka Primorac

Zimbabwe's New Diaspora: Displacement and the

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    A Hardback by JoAnn McGregor, Ranka Primorac

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      Publisher: Berghahn Books
      Publication Date: 01/06/2010
      ISBN13: 9781845456580, 978-1845456580
      ISBN10: 1845456580

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Zimbabwe’s crisis since 2000 has produced a dramatic global scattering of people. This volume investigates this enforced dispersal, and the processes shaping the emergence of a new "diaspora" of Zimbabweans abroad, focusing on the most important concentrations in South Africa and in Britain. Not only is this the first book on the diasporic connections created through Zimbabwe’s multifaceted crisis, but it also offers an innovative combination of research on the political, economic, cultural and legal dimensions of movement across borders and survival thereafter with a discussion of shifting identities and cultural change. It highlights the ways in which new movements are connected to older flows, and how displacements across physical borders are intimately linked to the reworking of conceptual borders in both sending and receiving states. The book is essential reading for researchers/students in migration, diaspora and postcolonial literary studies.



      Trade Review

      The ambiguity in [this] text is a breath of fresh air and the harbinger of something new in a world seemingly dominated by the imperatives of nation, ‘race’, ‘ethnicity’, and heteronormativity. · JRAI

      "Anyone who has witnessed the plight and sense of desperation of Zimbabweans who have fled Robert Mugabe’s violent regime of terror, and its consequent economic meltdown, should read this book. Its different chapters inform, document, analyse and evoke with great sensitivity and conceptual clarity some of the legal, economic and emotional struggles and predicaments Zimbabweans in the diaspora face. The outcome is a diverse and complex picture of this new African diaspora's dispersal within Southern Africa and the West. The book dispels the view that modern diasporas are no longer sites of suffering, exclusion and discrimination, or that their members no longer yearn for a lost homeland. Impressively well informed and up to date both factually and theoretically, the book should be read by all those interested in the new African diasporas. It will undoubtedly constitute a baseline for any future research on the Zimbabwean diaspora." · Pnina Werbner, Keele University

      "The papers in this volume cast new light on Zimbabwe's difficult recent history through the experiences of the large numbers of Zimbabweans now settled across the world, mostly in South Africa and Britain. Especially in South Africa, building popular support for the Zimbabwean diaspora is an urgent political challenge, and one for which this book provides plenty of resources. At the same time it offers a creative and intelligent contribution to the wider academic literature on diasporas." · Prof. Jennifer Robinson, UCL

      “The volume is to be welcomed as a considerable addition to the growing literature on African migrants and refugees in Europe and elsewhere. It brings together research conducted by a range of scholars from different disciplines and of different backgrounds, including many from Zimbabwe itself…Comparing the Zimbabwean 'diaspora' in depth in two important and different contexts (the UK and South Africa) gives it significant added value.” · Prof. Ralph Grillo, University of Sussex

      “This rich collection of case studies reveals the complexities of Zimbabweaness and diasporic identities and demonstrates how these particular diasporas are inserted into layers of interpretative schemes both in South Africa and UK. This focus on historical intertwining and the layers of interpretation that it creates, is an important contribution to Diaspora studies and studies on transnationalism that tend merely to explore contemporary issues of exclusion/marginalization or ‘political opportunity structures’ in the host society.” · Prof. Simon Turner, Danish Institute for International Studies



      Table of Contents

      Editors’ Preface
      Introduction

      Chapter 1. The Making of Zimbabwe’s New Diaspora
      JoAnn McGregor

      PART I: ZIMBABWEAN DIASPORIC COMMUNITIES IN SOUTH AFRICA

      Chapter 2. Makwerekwere: Migration, Citizenship and Identity among Zimbabweans in South Africa
      James Muzondidya

      Chapter 3. Zimbabwean Farmworkers in Limpopo Province, South Africa
      Blair Rutherford

      Chapter 4.The Politics of Legal Status for Zimbabweans in South Africa
      Norma Kriger

      PART II: THE CULTURAL POLITICS OF SURVIVAL IN BRITAIN

      Chapter 5. Zimbabwean Transnational Diaspora Politics in Britain
      Dominic Pasura

      Chapter 6. Diaspora and Dignity: Navigating and Contesting Civic Exclusion in the UK
      JoAnn McGregor

      Chapter 7. Burial at Home? Negotiating Death in the Diaspora and Harare
      Beacon Mbiba

      Chapter 8. Maintaining Transnational Families: HIV Positive Zimbabwean Women’s Narratives of Obligation and Support
      Martha Chinouya

      PART III: DIASPORIC IDENTITIES AND TRANSNATIONAL MEDIA

      Chapter 9. Debating 'Zimbabweanness' in Diasporic Internet Forums: Technologies of Freedom?
      Winston Mano and Wendy Willems

      Chapter 10. Rhodesians Never Die? The Zimbabwe Crisis and the Revival of Rhodesian Discourse
      Ranka Primorac

      Chapter 11. Exile and the Internet: Ndebele and Mixed-Race Diaspora ‘Homes’ Online
      Clayton Peel

      Chapter 12. One Dandelion Seedhead
      Brian Chikwava, introduced by Ranka Primorac

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