Writing on conflicts & war
Self exiled Zimbabwean author, Chenjerai Hove has co-edited a volume of essays by writers on conflicts and wars in Africa. His editing partner is Okey Ndibe a Nigerian scholar based in the United States.
Writers, Writing Conflicts and Wars in Africa is a collection of testimonies by various writers and scholars who have experienced, or explored, the continent’s conflicts and woes, including how the disruptions shape artistic and literary production.
The book is divided into two broad categories: in one, several writers speak directly, and with rich anecdotal details about the impact wars and conflicts have had in the formation of their experience and work; in the second, a number of scholars articulate how particular writers have assimilated the horrors of wars and conflicts in their literary creations.
Many African countries are caught up in perennial or recurrent political conflicts that often culminate in devastating wars. And by their nature, these conflicts affect writers in profound and sometimes paradoxical ways. On the one hand, literature—whether fiction, poetry, drama, or even film—is animated by conflict. On the other hand, the sense of dislocation as well as the humanitarian crises unleashed by wars and other kinds of conflicts also constitute grave impediments to artistic exploration and literary expression.
Writers and artists are frequently in the frontline of resistance to the kinds of injustices and abuses that precipitate wars and conflicts. Consequently, they are often detained, exiled, and even killed either by agents of state terror or by one faction or another in the tussle for state control.
The result is an invaluable harvest of reflections and perspectives that open the window into an essential, but until now sadly unexplored, facet of the cultural and political experience of African writers.
The broad scope of this collection—covering Darfur, the Congolese crisis, Biafra, Zimbabwe, South Africa, among others—is complemented by a certain buoyancy of spirit that runs through most of the essays and anecdotes.
The book is published by Nordic Africa Institute, Uppsala, Sweden.