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Moses Magadza Interviews Dobrota Pucherova on Marechera Legacy

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Dambudzo Marechera's Undying Legacy

Zimbabwean  writer Dambudzo Marechera, who once famously told people to let him write and  drink his beer, has been dead for 25 years but his life and work continue to  hold the imagination of multitudes of people. Moving  Spirit: The Legacy of Dambudzo Marechera in the 21st Century,  the latest book on the writer, was published in May. Marechera was an  exceptionally talented writer who has become a cult figure in Zimbabwe and  abroad. After being expelled from the then University Rhodesia (now University  of Zimbabwe) in the early 1970s, Marechera was admitted to Oxford University but  was expelled for unruly behaviour. Critics hailed him as a genius and his most  famous book, The House of Hunger  (1978) won the prestigious Guardian First Book Award, making Marechera the first  African to win the award. As  he lies buried in Zimbabwe, Marechera and his work have collectively become a  banquet  of  literature,attracting academic  scholars and ordinary people from far and wide. Emmanuel Sigauke, who teaches  English in the United States of America and has studied Marechera’s work in  depth, says that many people are drawn to Marechera by the way he exercised his  art, the risk-taking, the total commitment to it, the brilliant intelligence,  and the quality of the writing. In this wide-ranging interview, multiple  award-winning Zimbabwean journalist Moses Magadza interviews Dobrota  Pucherova (PhD) who compiled the book about its purpose, omissions and   additions on the life and works of Marechera. Excerpts of this interview first  appeared on IPS
http://www.ipsnews.net/2012/08/qa-the-undying-legacy-of-dambudzo-marechera/ 
 
Moses  Magadza: How familiar are you with Dambudzo Marechera the man and Dambudzo  Marechera the works?

Dobrota  Pucherova: I first “encountered” Marechera while doing my PhD on southern  African writing at Oxford. I did research on him and he became one chapter in my  PhD thesis which includes writers such as Bessie Head, Yvonne Vera, Ingrid  Jonker, Wopko Jensma, Mongane Serote, Kabelo Sello Duiker, Ishtiyaq Shukri and  Achmat Dangor. The thesis has now been published as The Ethics of Dissident  Desire in Southern African Writing (Trier, Germany: WVT, 2011) and deals with
literary instances of desire as a boundary-breaking energy that can contravene  the segregated spaces and bodies of southern African history. Concerning  Marechera the man – who can say they “know” Marechera? He remains an elusive
person for me as much as for others, although I have been lucky to speak to  several people who have known him personally.
 
Moses  Magadza: You are an academic and have studied Marechera extensively. What drew  you to the Marechera phenomenon?

 Dobrota  Pucherova: Marechera’s writing expresses very well the desire for mental freedom  that concerned me when studying southern African authors. He believed that  overcoming oppositional identity discourses and freeing the imagination to  create space for individual reinvention could achieve true liberation from  oppression. At the same time, Marechera’s vision of the political as sexual and  the sexual as political provided new insights into power relationships in  colonial and postcolonial conditions. Last, but not least, his flair for  language and his infectious humour make his books very pleasurable to  read.

 Moses  Magadza: What inspired this new book on  Marechera?

Dobrota Pucherova: The answer to this is a bit long-winded, so  bear with me. When I was writing my thesis chapter on Marechera, alongside I  wrote a play based mainly on Black Sunlight. To me, this novel is immensely comical and at the same time  sophisticated, and I felt that it has been misunderstood due to Marechera’s  unwillingness to edit his work, as James Currey has documented. In adapting the  novel for the stage, I wanted to bring forth its audacity and deeply  sophisticated comedy. The novel’s challenging humour, its intertextuality with  European modernist texts such as Beckett, Conrad and Kafka, and cryptic  references to Orwell, Bakunin and Sartre, among others, were what made the novel  to be perceived as “difficult”; on the stage, I felt, the novel’s meanings could  be literally “performed” and come to life. In addition, its parodic references  to Oxford University made it particularly suitable for an Oxford production. And  so, when I decided to produce the play in Oxford, I felt: why not organize an  entire festival on Marechera? The festival, which took place on May 15-17, 2009,  was an international multi-media event that included film, theatre, fiction,  poetry, painting, photography, memoir and scholarly essays, all inspired by  Marechera’s work and life. Information about the event can be found at ww.marecheracelebration.org. The book is the proceedings of the festival, with a few  additional pieces. Julie Cairnie, who has co-edited the book with me, was a  participant at the Oxford Celebration.

Moses  Magadza: What did you set out to achieve through this book? Have you  succeeded?

Dobrota Pucherova: I adapted Marechera’s prose for the stage  because I felt that the singularity of his engagement with language demads an  active, inventive, performative response to do it justice. In other words, I  feel scholarship can engage with Marechera in one way, by applying a particular  theoretical lens to his texts, but art can do it differently, by experiencing
his texts, which can bring new insights into the reality around us. As the  contributions in the book demonstrate, Marechera’s work invites reinvention:  performative and dissident, it plays with meaning and engenders new forms, myths  and epistemologies. Marechera inspires us to seek new ways of experiencing  reality. The book is about the irrational force of art that moves us, but often  cannot be explained, and we seek to respond to it through art. In this sense, I  think we have succeeded.

 Moses  Magadza: What would you say were the biggest challenges you encountered when you
worked on this project?


Dobrota Pucherova: The biggest challenge was to find a  publisher. Several academic publishers were afraid of this book, as it is not a  strictly scholarly volume, but rather a “big baggy monster” that includes  fiction, poetry, memoir, pictures etc. Eventually, I was very lucky to meet Dr.  Veit Hopf of LIT Verlag, Berlin, who offered to take on the project and  suggested to include the DVD, which contains the multi-media presented at the  Oxford festival, as well as bonus archival material.  


Moses  Magadza: Essays by Dambudzo Marechera’s contemporaries like Musaemura Zimunya,  Stanley Nyamfukudza, and Charles Mungoshi are conspicuously absent from your  compilation. How do you explain this?

Dobrota Pucherova: The majority of contributions in the book  were presented at the Oxford Celebration. The people you mention did not respond  to the call for papers, which was widely distributed. Stanley Nyamfukudza was  invited to come present his memories of Marechera at the festival, but he  declined. I met with him privately after the festival, however, and he explained  that he does not like to dig out old memories, for reasons of his own. It was  therefore very nice of him to at least privately share some of these memories  for the benefit of me and Ery Nzaramba, who is making a film about  Dambudzo.

Moses  Magadza: Some people think this is the chink in this book’s armor. What impact
might this omission have on this book?


Dobrota Pucherova: No book on Marechera can possibly be complete  – that is all I can add. There are other famous contemporaries of Marechera who  are not included in the book.

Moses  Magadza: Why does this book rely heavily on memoirs and personal essays rather
than fully researched academic essays?


Dobrota Pucherova: The book reflects mainly the contributions  presented at the Oxford festival. Several academics who presented academic  essays in Oxford did not eventually submit completed papers for the book, so we  had to work with what we had. However, we don’t think this is the book’s  weakness. There have been several scholarly volumes on Marechera (a new  scholarly book on Marechera is coming out this year with James Currey) but there  has not yet been a book just like this. The multi-media pieces are accompanied  by artists’ essays about how and why Marechera inspires them.  

Moses  Magadza: What new insights does this book provide into the life and work of  Dambudzo Marechera?

Dobrota Pucherova: This book is not so much about Marechera, but  about how Marechera inspires others. I believe it provides many new insights  into Marechera’s relationships with his contemporaries, with other authors and  with his fans and inspirees. For example, Carolyn Hart’s essay explores  Marechera’s relationship with African-American postmodern writers, while Katja  Kellerer’s piece examines the intertextualities between “The House of Hunger”  and Ignatius Mabasa’s Mapenzi
(1999). There are also two pieces on the Marechera cult. The memoir section  provides many interesting insights into Marechera’s personal and professional  relationships, including his love relationships. 


Moses  Magadza: This new book comes with rare, archival materials that include  audiovisuals such as Marechera’s ranting at the Berlin Conference in 1979, and  his speech on African writing he gave in Harare in 1986. How important and in  what way is this archival material?

 Dobrota Pucherova: This material was added as a bonus to the  main DVD material – the creative contributions by filmmakers, musicians and  actors. It was offered to us by Flora Veit-Wild who wanted to make it available  to Marechera fans and we think it will be of interest, as it shows Marechera in  various periods in his life. For me, seeing Marechera interviewed by Ray  Mawerera in Harare in 1984 was a completely different experience than watching  him drunk and deeply depressed in the London squat as he appears in Chris  Austin’s film. In the Ray Mawerera interview, Marechera is an entirely different  person – calm, communicative and composed.

Moses  Magadza: After this fascinating book - complete, as I have said, with archival  material, footnotes and references as well as Flora Wild’s seemingly valedictory  piece –what else remains to know about Dambudzo
Marechera?


Dobrota Pucherova: I believe no book on Marechera can be  complete and I am sure there will be other books on Marechera. Helon Habila’s  biography of Marechera is due to be published next year, and I look forward to  reading it.

Moses  Magadza: For you as a scholar and writer, was this book a once-off undertaking  or the opening gambit of an on-going series on  Marechera?

Dobrota Pucherova: To organize the festival took a year and a  half, to bring out this book took three years. I am not currently planning a  series on Marechera, since I am working on other African writers and thinkers at  the moment: Nuruddin Farah, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, and Ngugi wa Thiong’o. 
 
Moses  Magadza: What, in your view, sets Marechera distinctly apart from his  contemporaries and today’s writers?

Dobrota Pucherova: Marechera reacted to the Marxist and  nationalist tradition in African writing with cosmopolitanism and post-racialism  at a time in Zimbabwean history when it was most controversial to do so. He  described the violence of the colony and post colony with a liberating laughter  and dared to laugh even at the power presumptions of the anti-colonial struggle.  Identifying language’s key role in upholding systems of power, he explodes  language to create new meanings and paradigms. Moreover, Marechera dared to go  to those places in the human psyche where no other black African writer before
him had gone. Other have done so after Marechera – of these, I would mention  Yvonne Vera and Kabelo Sello Duiker, who similarly explore the dark spaces of  the mind and whose highly poetic but authentic language sets them apart from  other African writers. It is very sad that both of these have died young, just  like Dambudzo.