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Accepted Paper:
Paper short abstract:
Ancestors and angry spirits, resurfacing bones and leaky, fleshy bodies: the transforming materialities of death in postcolonial Zimbabwe although not directly related to afro-caribbean religions, it is certainly about african religion, but also violence, and most importantly, the political efficacy of fleshy materialities and transforming, leaky materials of bodies and persons.
Paper long abstract:
Bones occupy a complex place in Zimbabwe's postcolonial milieu. From ancestral bones rising again in the struggle for independence, and later land, to resurfacing bones of unsettled war dead or the troubling remains of gukurahundi victims, it is clear that bones are intertwined in postcolonial politics in ways that go far beyond, yet necessarily implicate, contests over memory, commemoration and the representation of the past. As both extensions of the dead (spirit 'subjects' making demands on the living), and as unconscious 'objects' or 'things' (retorting to and provoking responses from the living), bones in Zimbabwe not only challenge normalising processes of state commemoration and heritage, but also animate a myriad of personal, kin, clan, class and political loyalties and struggles. But recent political violence indicates that it is not only dry bones but also the fleshy materiality of tortured bodies that are entangled in Zimbabwe's troubled postcolonial milieu. Therefore I seek to explore and contrast the complexity of agencies entangled in the affective presence and emotive materiality of both bones and bodies in Zimbabwe. If bodies inscribed with torturous performances of sovereignty do have substantial, if duplicitous, political affects, how does this contrast with the unsettling presence of the longer dead? What does the passage of time - both the material and leaky decomposition of flesh, but equally the transformative processes of burial - do to the affective presence and emotive materiality of the dead? How do broken bodies become bones?
Death, materiality and the person in Afro-Caribbean religions
Session 1