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Nervous Conditions ) is the groundbreaking debut novel by Tsitsi Dangarembga, the first Englishlanguage novel published by a Black Zimbabwean woman . Set in 1960s Rhodesia, it follows Tambudzai Tambu, a young Shona girl fighting to access education after her brothers death. As she moves from rural life into missionary schooling, Tambus journey illuminates themes of race, gender, colonialism, and familial power dynamics
The title draws from Jean-Paul Sartres introduction to Frantz Fanons The Wretched of the Earth: The condition of native is a nervous condition, echoing the psychological impacts of colonisation on identity and autonomy
Author: Tsitsi Dangarembga
Genre: Bildungsroman / Postcolonial Literature
Pages: 204
Language: English
Awards: Commonwealth Writers' Prize (Africa, Best Book) in 1989; listed among BBC's 100 books that shaped the world (#66) in 2018
A pioneering work of African feminist and postcolonial literature
Explores complex motherdaughter and familial power relations in a colonial context, especially through Tambu and her cousin Nyasha, whose rebellion manifests in serious psychological struggle and eating disorders a critical metaphor for cultural alienation
Celebrated for its lyrical yet baroque prose and insightful narrative structure, giving Tambu a deeply introspective voice of resistance and identity formation
Nervous Conditions, Tsitsi Dangarembga, Zimbabwean literature, African feminism, postcolonial novel, coming-of-age, Shona family, Rhodesia, educational themes, colonialism, gender studies, canonical African novel