Abstract

ABSTRACT The demise of Apartheid and colonialism in South Africa and Zimbabwe ushered in hope among the masses, who expected transformation to improve their economic, political and social conditions. However, context and history conspired to orchestrate persistent suffering, uncertainty and existential angst, which find expression in literary works. Drawing from Agamben’s concept of biopolitics, we interrogate fictional representations of economic and socio-political conditions in post-apartheid South Africa and post-independent Zimbabwe. We analyse how writers portray post-colonial conditions, as shaping and creating the figure of homo Sacer. The study focuses on Tagwira’s The Uncertainty of Hope, Mhlongo’s After Tears and Moele’s Room 207, to assess how writers portray the post-independence subject, as embodying precarity in spaces that ought to have afforded them dignity and hope. The Foucault-Agamben connection and Mbembe’s notions of conviviality and necropolitics are used to explain the deplorable conditions of citizens. The texts convey ambiguities and paradoxes generated from sovereign power that have the potential to reduce citizens and non-citizens to a naked existence. The novels satirise and subvert sovereign power for poor governance, corruption and political betrayal, which have bred anxiety, disillusionment, inequalities, marginalisation and poverty among ordinary people, as summed up in Agamben’s notion of bare life.

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