Original Research

Biopolitical rulership and motifs in Bulawayo’s Glory: A Zimbabwean version of Orwellian society

Esther Mavengano
Literator | Vol 45, No 1 | a2058 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/lit.v45i1.2058 | © 2024 Esther Mavengano | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 30 January 2024 | Published: 11 December 2024

About the author(s)

Esther Mavengano, Research Institute for Theology and Religion, College of Human Sciences, University of South Africa, Pretoria, South Africa; Department of English, Faculty of Linguistics, Literature and Cultural Studies, English and American Studies Technische Universitat Dresden, Dresden, Germany; and Department of English and Media Studies, Faculty of Arts, Great Zimbabwe University, Masvingo, Zimbabwe

Abstract

In this study, I reread George Orwell’s remarkable text Animal Farm together with Noviolet Bulawayo’s second novel, titled Glory. Orwell’s allegoric novel remains astute in its account of the fate of living under the shadow of an autocratic state whose leadership is haunted by the paranoia of losing power. Orwell deploys symbolic animals, including dogs, hens, pigs, horses, sheep and donkeys, to function as salient embodiments permeated with figurative meanings about a corrupt regime which lashes out at its victims. I deploy Giorgio Agamben’s concepts of bare life, homo sacer, state of exception and suspension of law in reading the Zimbabwe electoral politics and biopolitical imaginings of the postcolonial state. I foreground contemporary power mechanisms, unruly manifestation and performativity on the body and mind of the homo sacer(s). I also interrogate the Napoleon forms of power exercised by state ‘security agents’ – renamed growling dogs and defenders in modern Zimbabwe. I conclude that biopolitical power, in an environment where the exception has become the rule, serves in the management of perturbed citizens.

Contribution: Giorgio Agamben’s biopolitical conceptual framework has rarely been used to examine the intricate and often paradoxical relations between those in power (rulers) and ordinary citizens (the ruled) in present-day Zimbabwe. This study brings to attention spectacles of power, the fate of homo sacer figures and their conviviality – as central tropes complexly enunciated and thematised in both Orwell and Bulawayo’s fictional writings. The parallel analyses of the two novels from different historical periods and literary traditions in this study offer fresh reflections on the complexities that arise from living under autocratic rule.


Keywords

Agamben’s biopolitical theorisation; Animal Farm; growling dogs; menacing defenders; Napoleon power; suspension of law; Zimbabwean literature

Sustainable Development Goal

Goal 16: Peace, justice and strong institutions

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