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Book
Review: The Book of Not by Tsitsi Dangarembga
Zukisma
Wanner
Extracted from African Writing Online, June-August 2007
http://www.african-writing.com/zukis.htm
Fifteen years
ago, Tsitsi
Dangarembga wrote Nervous
Conditions, a text that has become one of the set books in most
African countries. In Nervous Conditions, Dangarembga gives us a
tale of Tambudzayi, a young, rural, black Rhodesian female who is
informally adopted by her paternal uncle so she can get an education
and change the lives of her rural family. At the end of Nervous
Conditions, Tambu has learnt how to use a fork and knife. She has
also become somewhat politicized by her bulimic cousin, Nyasha,
and has won a scholarship to The Young Ladies' College of
the Sacred Heart. What more can she want? A lot, as the sequel,
The
Book of Not (Ayebia), shows.
In the The Book of Not,
set mostly at the high school Tambu attends, the author shows the
struggles of young Tambu in a pre-independence Zimbabwe and a post-independent
Rhodesia as she attempts to fit in as one of a handful of black
students at a largely white private girls' school. Tambu takes
heed of her uncle's words and believes that with education
she can earn the world's respect but this meets with disillusionment,
when, after she gets the best O Level results, a less qualified
person is given the school honours.
Her principal announces
the winner: " . . . this young lady is also a champion swimmer.
As the Young ladies' college of the Sacred Heart undertakes
to nurture well-rounded human beings, the O-Level trophy goes to . . . ."
And the name is not Tambudzai's but that of a white classmate
who was second best. Her only black colleague pushes her to question
the status quo but our Tambu keeps quiet.
She again responds in
the same manner after her studies in post-independence Rhodesia
when, as a copywriter at a white owned advertising agency, her advertising
campaign is credited to a senior white male copywriter who then
gets an award for it. The country is free. She is now staying in
a multicultural hostel for young ladies as one of a handful of black
ladies but she encounters the same injustices post as she did pre-independence
and there is no one she can complain to because the powers-that-be
are the same at her workplace as at her high school. If there was
ever a way of highlighting that the more things change the more
they stay the same, Dangarembga manages to make that theme shine
in The Book of Not.
To a reader of the 21st
century, Tambu is infuriating in her timidity and her inability
to fight back, and yet, Dangarembga writes her prose so well that
in spite of wanting to kick Tambu even as you read, you cannot,
but avoid turning the pages to find out just what the lead character's
end will be. It is also a sign of Dangarembga's historical
accuracy that Tambu is the way she is in spite of her education
because, face it, women (black or white) who acted liberated and
spoke back in the early years of post-independence Zimbabwe were
an anomaly.
But Tambu can
also be endearing even as she annoys. She joins a group of white
schoolmates to go and knit for the Rhodesian Army. Her reason? Her
twin white classmates' parents were killed by black guerillas
and she hoped when the twins got back to school they could hear
what she is doing and realize that ‘we are all not bad.'
Reconciliation? Forget Bishop Tutu. They should have had a Tambudzayi
as leader of South Africa's post-apartheid Truth and Reconciliation
Commission.
In The Book of Not, Dangarembga
reintroduces a lot of her old characters, including Tambu's
detestable mother, her misogynistic uncle, her bitter aunt, and
her intelligent and ever-questioning cousin Nyasha. It is the family
we have all wanted to run away from at some point in time. For all
connoisseurs of African literature, The Book of Not is an important
new read. The story of Tambu surprises with its poignant commentary
on a still painful Zimbabwean past.
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