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2021 Peace Prize goes to Zimbabwean Tsitsi Dangarembga

  • June 21, 2021

The German Publishers and Booksellers Association is honoring Zimbabwean filmmaker and author Tsitsi Dangarembga with its 2021 Peace Prize of the German Book Trade, an award created in 1950 and endowed with a €25,000 ($30,000) prize. 

“Dangarembga combines inimitable storytelling with a universally compelling perspective in a body of work that has made her not only one of the most important artists in her native land, but also a popular and widely-recognized voice of Africa in contemporary literature,” said the jury of the German Publishers and Booksellers Association in a statement on Monday. 

Beyond her award-winning work as an author and filmmaker, Tsitsi Dangarembga is dedicated to fostering creative industries in her home country and is renowned as an activist committed to protecting civil liberties and promoting political change in Zimbabwe.

The founding member of writer association PEN Zimbabwe was recognized with the PEN Award for Freedom of Expression and the PEN Pinter Prize earlier this year.

‘This Mournable Body’ is set in late-1990s Zimbabwe

She was also shortlisted for the Booker Prize last year with This Mournable Body, the third novel in a trilogy portraying a woman in different phases of her life, from her youth to middle age — stories depicting the struggle for female self-determination in Zimbabwe.

‘100 stories that shaped the world’

Published in 2018, This Mournable Body was praised by The New York Times Book Review as a “masterpiece,” while Kirkus Reviews described it as a “haunting, incisive, and timely glimpse into how misogyny and class strife shape life in post-colonial Zimbabwe.”

Tsitsi Dangarembga started her trilogy with Nervous Conditions in 1988. The sequel, titled The Book of Not, came out in 2006.

Nervous Conditions firmly established Dangarembga’s reputation in the international literary scene: It was the first book written by a Black woman to be published in English out of Zimbabwe. The author won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize with it in 1989, which led to translations into many languages.

‘Nervous Conditions’ has become a modern classic

In 2018, the novel was included on the BBC’s list of “100 stories that shaped the world,” landing between Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children and Antoine de Saint-Exupery’s The Little Prince.

However, This Mournable Body almost didn’t see the light of day. “It had been rejected by different publishers, and at some point I was so desperate I started posting extracts on Facebook,” Dangarembga revealed at the African Book Festival.

Fortunately, the novelist’s digital SOS was spotted by renowned editor and literary critic Ellah Wakatama Allfrey, who helped get the book published.

A filmmaking activist

Yet the acclaim of Dangarembga’s debut novel didn’t make it easier for her following projects to materialize.

Nervous Conditions didn’t get any traction in Zimbabwe,” she said at the opening panel of the African Book Festival in Berlin in 2019, where she was invited to curate the event. “I have always been writing against power and that’s why things don’t always happen.”

After her debut novel, the author — who was born in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) in 1959 — studied film at the German Film and Television Academy in Berlin from 1989 to 1996, moving on to a PhD in Africa Studies at Berlin’s Humboldt University afterwards.

While doing so, she wrote the script for the film Neria (1993), which became the highest-grossing film in Zimbabwe. Contributing to its success was the soundtrack by the country’s most internationally recognized cultural icon, musician Oliver Mtukudzi, who died in January 2019.

Dangarembga also directed her own documentaries and feature films, including Everyone’s Child (1996), which was the first feature film directed by a Black Zimbabwean woman.

After her time living in Europe, she returned to Zimbabwe with her family in 2000, where she established various projects to develop the film industry and support female directors. This included founding a production company called Nyerai Films, as well as the International Images Film Festival for Women in Harare.

She is also a founding member of the Institute of Creative Arts for Progress in Africa, an organization that supports works of art and audio-visual productions in Zimbabwe.

  • Contemporary African filmmakers: Names to remember

    Tsitsi Dangarembga

    Dangarembga is not only a filmmaker but also successfully writes novels and screenplays, including for the film 1993 “Neria” that went on to become the most-watched film in Zimbabwe. In 2020, Dangarembga was arrested in Harare at a protest against government corruption and still faces trial a year later.

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    Wanuri Kahiu

    Born in Nairobi in 1980, the director had a global cinema success with her 2018 film “Rafiki.” The first Kenyan film shown at the Cannes Film Festival, it portrays a love affair between two young Kenyan women and was banned in her home country. Kahui is now off to Hollywood, where she will direct “The Thing about Jellyfish,” based on the acclaimed novel by Ali Benjamin.

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    Kemi Adetiba

    The Nigerian filmmaker, who also makes television series and music videos, is a big name in Nollywood — which is what people call Nigerian cinema, the second most productive in the world after Indian film. Commercially, Adetiba’s feature films are hugely successful. She is producing her next film, a sequel to her blockbuster “King of Boys,” exclusively for Netflix.

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    Kunle Afolayan

    The Nigerian director is one of the most important representatives of the new Nigerian cinema (“New Nollywood”), which is characterized by narrative complexity, a new aesthetic — and a much bigger budget. Afolayan’s thriller “The Figurine — Araromire” (2009), one of Nigeria’s most commercially successful films, is considered to have launched the movement.

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    Abderrahmane Sissako

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    Philippe Lacote

    The film director from the Ivory Coast most recently premiered “La Nuit des Roies” (2020) at the Venice International Film Festival. The film, reminiscent of the stories from the “One Thousand and One Nights” Arabian folk takes, tells the story of convicted criminal named Zama who becomes a convincing storyteller in order to survive at La Maca prison in the Ivory Coast capital, Abidjan.

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    Macherie Ekwa Bahango

    Promising new talent: The 27-year-old director from the Democratic Republic of Congo saw her film “Maki’La” debut at the 2018 Berlin Film Festival. The young self-taught director spent three years working on her first feature film, which is the story of a group of street children in Kinshasa. The film won top prize at the Ecrans Noirs African film festival in Cameroon.

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    Moussa Toure

    Moussa Toure is a Senegalese film director, producer and screenwriter and has long been a major figure in African cinema. His feature films and documentaries are often political. Toure describes his 2012 film “La Pirogue,” which tells the story of refugees’ journey by boat from Africa to Europe, as a “slap in the face of the Senegalese government.”

    Author: Maria John Sánchez


International acclaim, domestic prosecution

Accolades such as the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade, the PEN Award for Freedom of Expression and the Booker Prize nomination are a demonstration of support for the author, who has spent the past year facing government prosecution. 

Tsitisi Dangarembga was arrested on July 31 last year for joining peaceful protests against government corruption.

Dangarembga and other Zimbabwean activists have faced a year of prosecution following a demonstration in July 2020

After being released on bail, she was ordered to surrender her passport to the authorities and report to a police station every week between different court appearances. Her trial has been repeatedly delayed by prosecutors. According to Zimbabwean daily The Herald, the next trial date is set for July 22. 

Despite the challenges, Dangarembga describes herself in her Twitter profile as “almost fearless.” Well aware of the significance of her activism, she once posted on social media: “If you want your suffering to end, you have to act. Action comes from hope. This is the principle of faith and action.”

The award ceremony for the Peace Prize of the German Book Trade will take place on Sunday, 24 October 2021, in Frankfurt.

Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/2021-peace-prize-goes-to-zimbabwean-tsitsi-dangarembga/a-57977846?maca=en-rss-en-all-1573-rdf

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