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In The Mad, originally published in Shona as Mapenzi and awarded the Zimbabwe Book Publishers Association Award, Mabasa's pen runs riot, using sarcasm, humor, and a disjointed writing style that gels with its troubled and unpredictable characters. Set in the second decade of Zimbabwe's independence, the novel paints a vivid portrait of poverty, violence, dehumanization, and postcolonial dislocation. It doesn't shy away from painful truths, instead laying bare the realities of marginalized communities in Zimbabwe and exploring madness, dreams, strife, and a search for something that seems elusive. Evocative of the hustle and bustle in the lives and minds of many Zimbabweans during this period, the story reeks with the experience of people struggling to survive poverty, violence, disintegration, fear, coloniality, and dejection.
Structured in a way that echoes oral performance, with dramatic monologues, dialogue-driven exposition, and moral ambiguity that swim in a pool of decolonial language politics, The Mad is not only a milestone in Zimbabwean literature but a powerful African literary work that redefines what the modern African novel can be. It uniquely contributes to the broader conversation around how African societies manage cultural continuity and rupture in the face of colonial legacies, poverty, and globalization. It is no surprise, then, that the Times Literary Supplement has called The Mad "one of the most significant books to have come out of Africa."
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In The Mad, originally published in Shona as Mapenzi and awarded the Zimbabwe Book Publishers Association Award, Mabasa's pen runs riot, using sarcasm, humor, and a disjointed writing style that gels with its troubled and unpredictable characters. Set in the second decade of Zimbabwe's independence, the novel paints a vivid portrait of poverty, violence, dehumanization, and postcolonial dislocation. It doesn't shy away from painful truths, instead laying bare the realities of marginalized communities in Zimbabwe and exploring madness, dreams, strife, and a search for something that seems elusive. Evocative of the hustle and bustle in the lives and minds of many Zimbabweans during this period, the story reeks with the experience of people struggling to survive poverty, violence, disintegration, fear, coloniality, and dejection.
Structured in a way that echoes oral performance, with dramatic monologues, dialogue-driven exposition, and moral ambiguity that swim in a pool of decolonial language politics, The Mad is not only a milestone in Zimbabwean literature but a powerful African literary work that redefines what the modern African novel can be. It uniquely contributes to the broader conversation around how African societies manage cultural continuity and rupture in the face of colonial legacies, poverty, and globalization. It is no surprise, then, that the Times Literary Supplement has called The Mad "one of the most significant books to have come out of Africa."