dc.description.abstract | This article focuses on Tsitsi Dangarembga’s novel This Mournable Body (2018), which
completes her trilogy on Tambudzai Sigauke’s life story in relation to the neoliberal
political order in contemporary Zimbabwe. The country has been recently referred to as
cultivating ultra-neoliberal policies, and, in such a framework, state repression becomes
replaced by state negligence towards citizens’ economic survival. In This Mournable Body,
neoliberalism and the uneven accumulation of wealth are portrayed through the tourism
industry. The novel shows deepening forms of injustice and economic discrepancies in
neoliberal Zimbabwe, where impoverished groups of people, living in the cities as well as
outside them, are compelled to commodify their lives for the needs of the tourism industry
in order to get by. In the novel, Tambudzai emerges as an egoistic character, as she
epitomises a new type of neoliberal citizen–subject who is ready to maximise her own
benefits at the expense of others and whose ambitions remain only in her own career. I
analyse her character with regard to the so-called sell-out mentality; however,
Dangarembga depicts Tambudzai’s unpatriotic behaviour as a defence mechanism, which
finally gives way to full mourning at the end of the novel. Dangarembga’s critical
characterisation of the neoliberal forms of capitalism is juxtaposed with her representation
of an alternative unhu/ubuntu business model at the end of the novel. However, even if
Dangarembga proposes unhu/ubuntu business as a Zimbabwean form of balanced capitalist
enterprise, I argue that neoliberal markets are taking advantage of these African forms of
capitalism as well. The romanticised ending of the novel slightly undermines its otherwise
astute illustration of uneven development in neoliberal Zimbabwe, which contributes to
rural and urban poverty, communal rupture and drastic forms of citizen competition. | en_US |