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Charumbira, Ruramisai

WORK TITLE: Imagining a Nation
WORK NOTES:
PSEUDONYM(S):
BIRTHDATE:
WEBSITE:
CITY:
STATE:
COUNTRY:
NATIONALITY:

https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/history/faculty/rc28829 * https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/ffiles/rc28829/naemoamQrA

RESEARCHER NOTES:

PERSONAL

Born August 2, 1967.

EDUCATION:

Saint Mary’s University (Halifax, Canada), M.A., 1999; University of Toronto, M.A., 2001; Yale University, Ph.D., 2006.

ADDRESS

  • Office - Department of History, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712.

CAREER

Writer and educator. Denison University, Granville, OH, assistant professor, 2006-08; University of Texas, Austin, assistant professor, 2008–; Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History, advisory editor.

MEMBER:

African Studies Association, American Historical Association, International Oral History Association, Council for European Studies, European Studies’ Research Network on Transnational Memory and Identity in Europe.

AWARDS:

Grants and fellowships from organizations, including the University of Texas, Austin, Huntington Library, Library of Congress, Denison University, Columbia University, and Yale University.

WRITINGS

  • Imagining a Nation: History and Memory in Making Zimbabwe, University of Virginia Press (Charlottesville, VA), 2015

Contributor of articles to publications, including History in Africa, Historian, Journal of Postcolonial Education, and History Compass.

SIDELIGHTS

Ruramisai Charumbira is a Zimbabwean writer and educator. She holds a master’s degree from Saint Mary’s University, in Halifax, Canada, a master’s degree from the University of Toronto, and a Ph.D. from Yale University. After graduating from Yale in 2006, Charumbira began working as an assistant professor at Denison University. Two years later, she joined the University of Texas, Austin, also as an assistant professor. Charumbira also serves as an advisory editor for the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History. She has written articles that have appeared in publications, including History in Africa, Historian, Journal of Postcolonial Education, and History Compass. 

In 2015, Charumbira released her first book, Imagining a Nation: History and Memory in Making Zimbabwe. In this volume, she analyzes how people remember significant events in the history of the colonial territory of Rhodesia, which became Zimbabwe in 1980. She highlights a conflict between African natives and European colonists that occurred in 1896-97. The Europeans won the conflict and set precedents for how Africans would be treated. Charumbira cites oral histories gathered in the region that discuss Nehanda-Charwe’s role in the 1896-97 conflict.   She compares white settlers’ accounts with African nationalists’ descriptions of the actions of Nehanda-Charwe, a female medium who communicated with spirits. Charumbira also compares women’s memories of the historical events with men’s.

Critic responded favorably to Imagining a Nation. C. Higgs, reviewer in Choice, commented: “This engaging … history is about an important topic.” Higgs concluded: “Charumbira makes a persuasive, cautionary case for always questioning received wisdom.” In a lengthy assessment of the volume on H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online , David Kenrick suggested: “Ruramisai Charumbira’s Imagining a Nation is an incisive and readable account of the significance of history in nationalist projects. Charumbira casts her net wide to explore black and white remembrances of a key event in the Rhodesian/Zimbabwean past—the 1896-97 conflict between European settlers and indigenous African polities across Mashonaland and Matabeleland. In 1896-97, less than a decade after the rule of Cecil Rhodes’s British South Africa Company (BSAC) had been established, European victory in these conflicts led to the patterns of colonial rule that would exist largely unchanged until Zimbabwe’s independence in 1980.” Kenrick also stated: “Charumbira has that rare gift among historians of rendering a difficult subject comprehensible. At the book’s outset she boldly states the social responsibility of the historian and it is refreshing to read a study of memory, history, and identity that manages to remain relatively jargon-free. The work uses an excellent variety of source material.”

BIOCRIT

PERIODICALS

  • Choice, April, 2016, C. Higgs, review of Imagining a Nation: History and Memory in Making Zimbabwe, p. 1216.

ONLINE

  • H-Net: Humanities and Social Sciences Online, https://networks.h-net.org/ (April 5, 2017), David Kenrick, review of Imagining a Nation.

  • University of Texas, Austin, Department of History, Web site, https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/ (March 15, 2017), author faculty profile.*

  • Imagining a Nation: History and Memory in Making Zimbabwe University of Virginia Press (Charlottesville, VA), 2015
1. Imagining a nation : history and memory in making Zimbabwe https://lccn.loc.gov/2015011672 Charumbira, Ruramisai, 1967- author. Imagining a nation : history and memory in making Zimbabwe / Ruramisai Charumbira. Charlottesville : University of Virginia Press, 2015. xvii, 280 pages : illustrations, map ; 24 cm. DT2908 C53 2015 ISBN: 9780813938226 (cloth : alk. paper)9780813938233 (e-book)
  • LOC Authorities -

    LC control no.: no2015038430

    Descriptive conventions:
    rda

    Personal name heading:
    Charumbira, Ruramisai, 1967-

    Birth date: 19670802

    Field of activity: History

    Affiliation: University of Texas at Austin

    Found in: Imagining a nation, 2015: ECIP title page (Ruramisai
    Charumbira) ECIP data sheet (Charumbira, Ruramisai; b.
    8/2/1967; Ruramisai Charumbira is Assistant Professor of
    History at the University of Texas at Austin)
    OCLC, March 23, 2015 (hdgs.: Charumbira, Ruramisai, 1967-;
    Charumbira, Ruramisai)

    ================================================================================

    LIBRARY OF CONGRESS AUTHORITIES
    Library of Congress
    101 Independence Ave., SE
    Washington, DC 20540

    Questions? Contact: ils@loc.gov

  • Department of History, The University of Texas at Austin Web site - https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/history/faculty/rc28829

    Ruramisai Charumbira
    Assistant Professor — Ph.D., Yale University
    Ruramisai Charumbira
    Contact

    E-mail: r-c@austin.utexas.edu
    Phone: 512-232-8361
    Office: GAR 0.136
    Campus Mail Code: B7000

    Interests

    Global History; Memory Studies; Feminist Theory; Ethno-archaeology
    Biography

    Research and Teaching Interests

    I am a passionate cultural historian with research and teaching interests in African and Global histories. My thematic focus includes: historical memory; feminist theory; women's and gender history; transnational cultures of memory; and theories of colonialism, and imperialism. My recent book, Imagining a Nation: History and Memory in Making Zimbabwe (University of Virginia, 2015) was a Finalist for the the Berkshire Conference of Women’s Historians Book Prize.

    I am currently writing a second monograph on cultures of transnational migration and immigration - exploring, among other issues, what was remembered and forgotten by individuals, kin, and fictive kin as they remade themselves in foreign lands in the nineteenth century. I welcome graduate students interested in pursuing interdisciplinary research and graduate work on individual, social, and collective memory produced as traditional scholarly works as well as other creative forms of interpreting and representing the past. I also welcome contributions for the Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History where I serve as an Advisory Editor.

    My passion for research is equal to my passion for teaching where students and I challenge one another to think critically about the past, and find to meaning beyond the utilitarian function of a college degree. I regularly teach the following courses: African History; Women’s and Gender History; International Development; Human Rights; History and Memory; and Global History.

    CV: https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/ffiles/rc28829/naemoamQrA

QUOTED: "This engaging ... history is about an important topic."
"Charumbira makes a persuasive, cautionary case for always questioning received wisdom."

Charumbira, Ruramisai. Imagining a nation: history and memory in making Zimbabwe
C. Higgs
53.8 (Apr. 2016): p1216.
Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2016 American Library Association CHOICE
http://www.ala.org/acrl/choice/about

Charumbira, Ruramisai. Imagining a nation: history and memory in making Zimbabwe. Virginia, 2015. 280p bibl index afp ISBN 9780813938226 cloth, $45.00; ISBN 9780813938233 ebook, $45.00

(cc) 53-3621

DT2908

2015-11672 CIP

This engaging and often personal history is about an important topic: the creation, maintenance, and ongoing evolution of historical memory in the imagining of colonial Rhodesia and independent Zimbabwe. One is reminded of Simon Schamas Dead Certainties: Unwarranted Speculations (1991) as Charumbira (Univ. of Texas) walks readers through the (re) creation of two nationalist pillars: Cecil Rhodes and his allegory, Nehanda-Charwe, the female spirit medium who inspired resistance during the 1896-1897 war against occupation by the Pioneer Column of the British South African Company. Charumbira would likely be flattered by the comparison to Schama, but unlike him, she is an insider of sorts: a Zimbabwean born in the late colonial era and trained as a historian of gender and memory in the West, who, like many Zimbabweans, also works there. Charumbira explores how white settlers redefined Rhodes(ia) over time to maintain their power and how African nationalists found in Nehanda-Charwe a way to link their political agendas to ordinary Zimbabweans' desire to recover their land from white occupiers. Drawing on archival sources, oral histories, and a range of scholarship, Charumbira makes a persuasive, cautionary case for always questioning received wisdom. Summing Up: *** Highly recommended. All college and university libraries.--C. Higgs, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Source Citation (MLA 8th Edition)
Higgs, C. "Charumbira, Ruramisai. Imagining a nation: history and memory in making Zimbabwe." CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries, Apr. 2016, p. 1216. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA449661752&it=r&asid=d7d154575b4abe8bf41d151b9924d611. Accessed 23 Feb. 2017.

Gale Document Number: GALE|A449661752

Higgs, C. "Charumbira, Ruramisai. Imagining a nation: history and memory in making Zimbabwe." CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries, Apr. 2016, p. 1216. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&it=r&id=GALE%7CA449661752&asid=d7d154575b4abe8bf41d151b9924d611. Accessed 23 Feb. 2017.
  • H-Net
    https://networks.h-net.org/node/3911/reviews/157394/kenrick-charumbira-imagining-nation-history-and-memory-making-zimbabwe

    Word count: 1761

    QUOTED: "Ruramisai Charumbira’s Imagining a Nation is an incisive and readable account of the significance of history in nationalist projects. Charumbira casts her net wide to explore black and white remembrances of a key event in the Rhodesian/Zimbabwean past—the 1896-97 conflict between European settlers and indigenous African polities across Mashonaland and Matabeleland. In 1896-97, less than a decade after the rule of Cecil Rhodes’s British South Africa Company (BSAC) had been established, European victory in these conflicts led to the patterns of colonial rule that would exist largely unchanged until Zimbabwe’s independence in 1980."
    "Charumbira has that rare gift among historians of rendering a difficult subject comprehensible. At the book’s outset she boldly states the social responsibility of the historian and it is refreshing to read a study of memory, history, and identity that manages to remain relatively jargon-free. The work uses an excellent variety of source material."

    Kenrick on Charumbira, 'Imagining a Nation: History and Memory in Making Zimbabwe'
    Author:
    Ruramisai Charumbira
    Reviewer:
    David Kenrick

    Ruramisai Charumbira. Imagining a Nation: History and Memory in Making Zimbabwe. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2015. xvii + 280 pp. $45.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-0-8139-3822-6.

    Reviewed by David Kenrick (Independent Scholar)
    Published on H-Nationalism (December, 2016)
    Commissioned by Sarah Mak

    Ruramisai Charumbira’s Imagining a Nation is an incisive and readable account of the significance of history in nationalist projects. Charumbira casts her net wide to explore black and white remembrances of a key event in the Rhodesian/Zimbabwean past—the 1896-97 conflict between European settlers and indigenous African polities across Mashonaland and Matabeleland. In 1896-97, less than a decade after the rule of Cecil Rhodes’s British South Africa Company (BSAC) had been established, European victory in these conflicts led to the patterns of colonial rule that would exist largely unchanged until Zimbabwe’s independence in 1980. Consequently, these conflicts gained significance in African and European narratives of the founding of the nations in Rhodesia/Zimbabwe. Charumbira seeks to trace the way historical narratives of the late nineteenth century became the basis for two ostensibly very distinct but surprisingly similar nationalist projects.

    Underpinning all of this is a broadly defined “gender” analysis that teases out the vast historical “silences” surrounding women in the male-dominated nationalist histories and memories of Rhodesia/Zimbabwe. It portrays women as active historical agents, who were nevertheless often confounded by the existence of twin settler/native patriarchies that conspired to reduce the roles of women in the nationalist narrative. In particular, this hangs around Charumbira’s fascination with Nehanda-Charwe, a female spirit medium whom both settlers and African nationalists portrayed as having led the 1896-97 rebellion. The book starts with an exploration of the woman, Nehanda-Charwe. With the help of colonial archival sources from Nehanda-Charwe’s trial, Charumbira, as per Ann L. Stoler, demonstrates that Nehanda-Charwe was neither a passive female victim nor the anti-imperialist firebrand that African nationalists later portrayed her as.[1] This introduces the character of Charumbira’s analysis, which proves a refreshingly disruptive and messy alternative to more standard explorations of the Rhodesian/Zimbabwean past.

    Elsewhere, Charumbira seeks to explore white settler perceptions of the 1896-97 rebellions and demonstrates how the settlers’ interpretation of the past “won out” in the foundational narratives of the Rhodesian nation. The deaths of early white settlers in the 1890s became the blood price by which whites had “earned” their dominion over Rhodesia, and their rule over Africans. She demonstrates how the person of Cecil Rhodes, the country’s “founder” and namesake, became the totemic figure of the new settler nation. Charumbira introduces readers to settler foundation myths very well by using interesting examples of particular stories and moments of memorialization. The most memorable of these is the settler tragedy of Blakiston and Routledge, two young men who became early settler heroes after being killed while trying to telegraph for assistance to help fellow Europeans besieged by “the rebels” in the Alice Mine at Mazowe (or Mazoe, as the settlers called it). She also demonstrates the rather brittle nature of these settler foundation myths, which, as my own research has found, proved to have serious consequences in later decades.[2] Their exclusionary nature forced Africans to craft their own historical narratives (sometimes with the help of European academics, such as Terence Ranger), and, while their tales of white triumph over African adversity helped inspire the Unilateral Declaration of Independence (UDI), they failed to unite white Rhodesians into anything resembling a “nation” in the 1960s and 1970s. Unfortunately, the two chapters that focus on settlers end in the mid-1930s, with a short footnote about the 1950s. The challenges of making foundational narratives based around events that many white Rhodesians had never even participated in became even greater after the population grew exponentially (relatively speaking) after the Second World War. As Charumbira points out, although class divisions existed at the time, the number of settlers in Rhodesia in 1936 was still quite tiny. Also, the potential to explore the way 1896-97 was deployed by whites in response to the “bush war” of the 1960s and 1970s is missed in the book. Another interesting, if not entirely convincing, concept introduced in this part of the book is that of “ideological Rhodesians.” An example of this concept can be found in the example of the American aficionado of Rhodesia who began his own private archive of the colony’s history in the 1930s. This individual is used by Charumbira to illustrate the importance of “outsiders” to national historical narratives. The point in and of itself is astute, but the idea of people supporting Rhodes’s dictums and therefore being defined as ideological Rhodesians seems a little far-fetched; could these people have not simply been imperialists?

    After exploring white memorialization of the 1890s, in which women are again relegated to the supporting cast, Charumbira returns to the alternative African oral traditions that were preserved alongside the oppressive, triumphal, colonialist histories. To do this, she focuses on the oral testimony of a series of men to bring out a number of key historical themes, most important, disaggregating the African population, particularly highlighting the divisions created when Africans sought opportunities to work for or with the colonial regime, either as policemen or pliant government-appointed officials and salaried chiefs. The chapter dealing with oral testimony conveys the alternative oral traditions well but comes off as rather speculative, something Charumbira acknowledges herself at its outset. The chapter ends rather abruptly and more detailed analysis could have been carried out in some cases. The points it emphasizes, however, are characteristically well made.

    Charumbira moves on to examine nationalist narratives of 1896 and Nehanda-Charwe, deconstructing the sanitized and bland “history” that underlies the contemporary Zimbabwean nation as represented in the so-called patriotic history of the governing Zimbabwe African National Union, Popular Front (ZANU PF) and the National Heroes Acre outside Harare. She carefully demonstrates just how contested these histories became during the nationalist struggle and following independence, as different people tried to lay claim to different imaginings of Nehanda-Charwe as a strategy to retain (or obtain) power or influence in the new postcolonial nation. In the final chapters, Charumbira introduces a fascinating argument that ZANU (PF)’s understanding and use of history was not influenced by socialist or communist tenets, as has often been argued, but was instead a product of the colonial experiences of nationalists (often in education or detention). In this reading, Nehanda-Charwe becomes the African counternarrative to the settlers’ Rhodes; the National Heroes Acre mirrors the Rhodesian “valhalla” in the Matopos hills, where Rhodes and several pioneer heroes were buried and venerated. Charumbira notes that, due to their education, African nationalist leaders often conceived of the nation in Western paradigms, refusing to acknowledge that Zimbabwe had a history that predated colonialism as its perceived backwardness acted as a hindrance to the emergence of a “modern” postcolonial nation. This illustration of the continuities between Rhodesia/Zimbabwe is a critically important one for undermining the exclusionary historical narratives that ZANU PF continues to use today but is also important for complicating our understanding of the Zimbabwean past and recognizing that April 1980 represented a moment of continuities as well as ruptures. One omission from these latter chapters is an exploration of how the other major nationalist movement in 1960s/1970s Rhodesia—the Zimbabwe African People’s Union (ZAPU) and its armed wing, the Zimbabwe People’s Revolutionary Army (ZIPRA)—engaged with history and gender. When Charumbira discusses the “nationalist movement” her account seems to elide the plurality of organizations fighting for Zimbabwean independence and suggests that she means ZANU; and whether or not ZAPU shared these attitudes is not particularly clear to the reader.

    Charumbira has that rare gift among historians of rendering a difficult subject comprehensible. At the book’s outset she boldly states the social responsibility of the historian and it is refreshing to read a study of memory, history, and identity that manages to remain relatively jargon-free. The work uses an excellent variety of source material in an attempt to trace those most elusive qualities—memory and identity—with success, largely thanks to the tight focus of the work around Mazowe and Nehanda-Charwe. It tells of a disrupted and complicated Zimbabwean past in which history and memory have been deployed in service of male-dominated national projects in which women like Nehanda-Charwe repeatedly refused to play ball. It explores the exclusivity and paranoia that underlay settler foundational myths and how these myths tried to paper over cracks that would only widen in the future. Importantly, it emphasizes the continuities between settler Rhodesia and “postcolonial” Zimbabwe. Finally, it demonstrates how history and memory are tools that can be utilized by anyone in the labyrinthine and internecine power struggles that accompany nationalist projects.

    Notes

    [1]. Ann L. Stoler, “Tense and Tender Ties: The Politics of Comparison in North American History and (Post) Colonial Studies,” The Journal of American History 88, no. 3 (2001): 829-865.

    [2]. David W. Kenrick, “Pioneers and Progress: White Rhodesian Nation-Building c. 1964-1979” (PhD diss., University of Oxford, 2016).

    Printable Version: http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showpdf.php?id=45276

    Citation: David Kenrick. Review of Charumbira, Ruramisai, Imagining a Nation: History and Memory in Making Zimbabwe. H-Nationalism, H-Net Reviews. December, 2016.
    URL: http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=45276
    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.

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