The front line runs through every woman : women & local resistance in the Zimbabwean Liberation War
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The front line runs through every woman : women & local resistance in the Zimbabwean Liberation War
(African issues)
James Currey , Weaver Press, 2011
- : James Currey pbk
- Other Title
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Women and local resistance in the Zimbabwean Liberation War
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 171-186) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Theorizes the experiences of women in wartime, and specifically of African women during Zimbabwe's anti-colonial struggle.
A Zimbabwe-specific study, focusing on the lives of women in a small locale (Chiweshe) during the anti-colonial insurgency, this book is also a challenge to established and still current modes of thought and research orientationswhich over-simplify the complex realities women face in the full range of violent conflicts, both past and present. By contextualizing the voices of women of Chiweshe, not only is an important and under-developed aspect of Zimbabwean and African history revealed, but a new approach to comprehending the highly-tensioned lives of women in war is presented, which is characterized here as Gendered Localised Resistance. This is examined through the prism of life in the Protected Villages in Chiweshe experienced in everyday social relations, revolutionary roles, and food security. It traces how women forged strategies of survival and resistance in the middle of guerrilla warfare pitted between the forces of the state and the revolutionary resistance movements.
The book can be read as a unique and richly detailed account of the lives of women during the Zimbabwe civil war and liberation struggle; as a wider argument about how researchers can approach and incorporate lived experience into accounts of larger dynamics (war/revolution); and as a substantial and important contribution to feminist historiography and writings on women and war.
Eleanor O' Gorman is Senior Associate at the Gender Studies Centre and a Research Associate at the Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of Cambridge; an independent consultant who has advised the UN, the UK Government (DFID and FCO), the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs, the European Commission, and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
Zimbabwe: Weaver Press
Table of Contents
Introduction: Women, War, Voice & Agency
Situating Women in Revolution: Battlefront Myths & Homefront Lives
Re-Framing Women's Revolutionary Lives: Women, Gender & Local Resistance
Setting the Fieldwork Context: Zimbabwe as Arena, Chiweshe as Locale
Women's Perceptions of Revolutionary Participation: Understandings of Agency & Consciousness
Living with & within Revolution: Challenges to Unity & Community
The Front Line Runs Through Every Woman: Resistance & Survival by Women in Revolutionary War
Conclusion: Women's Agency & Voice in War Reconsidered
by "Nielsen BookData"