Chapter One:: Introduction and Theoretical Background
Chapter One:: Introduction and Theoretical Background
Chapter One:: Introduction and Theoretical Background
I think there is a message that is linked with the search of our identity. Even if that identity is
never founded because it is a construction and a very changeable and dynamic portrait. In our
case we are obliged to establish bridges between the deaths (representing the live past) and the
living ones. Mozambique is a kind of veranda looking to the Indian Ocean and part of our
identity is born from that contact and cultural exchanges. Identities are built not in pure
features (which are always mirage) but in this traffic of differences.2
You must understand: we lack the competency to stow our dead away in a place called
eternity.
Our dead refuse to accept their final condition: in their disobedience, they invade our daily
lives, they intrude upon us from that territory where life’s law of exclusion should hold sway.
The most serious consequence of such promiscuity is that death itself, held in scant respect by
its lodgers, loses the fascination of total absence. Death ceases to be the most irrevocable and
absolute difference between beings.3
The above extracts epitomize the writings of António Emílio Leite Couto, popularly
known as Mia Couto, in that they fuse conventional polarities as a way of making an
diversity of experiences across gender, race, class and so forth. The novel explores the
tensions between and within the ‘official domain’4 and the domain of ‘the weak.’5
1
Wright, Derek. “Postmodernism As Realism: Magic History in Recent West African Fiction.” In:
Contemporary African Fiction. Bayreuth: Bayreuth African Studies. 1997, p. 181.
2
The information has been obtained in a personal interview with Mia Couto, a copy of which is
attached at the end of this research report.
3
Couto, Mia. “Rosalinda’s journey to neverness.” In: Every Man is a Race. Oxford: Heinemann. 1994,
p.25.
4
This thesis follows Adam Ashforth’s conception of ‘official domain(s)’ as bureaucratic structures of
governance involved in the ruling systems. This is a domain that believes in rationality, science and
exclusivity. Ashforth, Adam. The Politics of Official Discourses in Twentieth-Century South Africa.
Oxford: Clarendon press, 1990.
5
The concept of the weak has been adapted from James Scott. Scott uses the concept to refer to the
working class. (Scott, James C. Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance. New
Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1985, p. 29)
-1-
Ngoveni Lawrence
the weak has been adapted from James Scott as he analyses peasants’ resistance
against exploitation. While Scott’s use of the concept mainly refers to unskilled
working class people, this study will henceforth use it to mean marginalized groups
whose stories or memories remain on the periphery. Through this exploration of the
tension between the authorities and masses, Couto suggests the need for the
Couto’s texts requires a constant awareness of the multiple narrative strategies that he
deploys to shed light on the problem of memory. This approach results in a unique,
In the novel, the old people’s home serves as a setting in which the tension between
institutionalized and popular versions of the past manifests. This conflict emerges
Excellency, a director of the old people’s home. Vastsome represents the corrupt and
brutal leadership of modern-states. He “is a caricature of the new type of leaders, new
elite that emerged after the war, characterized by an outstanding appetite for power.”6
Izidine and his investigation epitomize officials’ obsession with power, logic,
characters are the catalysts through which Couto exposes the greediness and power of
modern governments and states. These are institutions that Jane Starfield says “can,
6
The information has been obtained in a personal interview with Mia Couto, a copy of which is
attached at the end of this research report.
-2-
Ngoveni Lawrence
should they feel that their version of the past is elemental to their staying in power,”7
circulate their historical accounts through their various mediums. However, as Jane
Starfield assets, “official history has an implicit articulation with other, less powerful,
but no less competitive, versions.”8 In Under the Frangipani, the ruling body’s
permeable frontier between the dead and the living. This becomes possible with the
adoption of a dead narrator whose spirit occupies part of Izidine’s brain. The old
people’s stories further defy Izidine’s attempts to solve the crime by refusing to be
investigation, the old people invite Izidine to their memories. Izidine also finds it
difficult to record their stories because he does not understand their language, and
often they discourage him from writing, preferring their stories to remain in the oral
medium.
This conflict between the conventions of modern states and popular beliefs is a
universal phenomenon and derives from multiple factors. In the Mozambican context,
period to the villages of the post independence period, sorcery has been considered an
essential medium of power; the powerful, quite simply, have been assumed to act
within the invisible realm.”9 Richard Petraitis draws attention to the use of African
traditional healers during Mozambique’s civil war that began in 1975 and continued
till the early 1990s. He says that “RENAMO (Resistência Nacional de Moçambique)
7
Starfield, Jane. “For Future Reference”: The Mamathola Removal of 1958 and the Making of
Apartheid”. (Unpublished paper presented at the University of the Witwatersrand history Workshop; 6
– 10 February, 1990) p. 1.
8
Starfield, J. p. 1.
9
West, Harry. “Sorcery of Construction and Socialist Modernization: Ways of Understanding Power in
Postcolonial Mozambique”. American Ethnologist 28 (1): 119 – 150. 2001, p. 121.
-3-
Ngoveni Lawrence
fighters used healers to prepare their bodies with herbs before battles. These herbs
were meant to act as a type of magical bulletproof vest for soldiers.”10 According to
“rationalists” this dependence on magic is problematic for in their view, it led to the
argues, FRELIMO’s mission was not only to depose the colonial regime, “but, also,
Mozambicans, was not well received by many of the country’s citizenry. As a result,
many Mozambicans believed that the increasing dominance of modern practices is the
Marwick, West asserts that “rapid social changes are likely to cause an increased
Scott draws out attention to forms of peasant resistance or rather what he calls,
“weapons of the weak.”14 Scott emphasizes the need to understand what he calls
“everyday forms of resistance”. He says that these mundane, but constant resistances
are not directed at the state officials. Instead they are aimed at the immediate boss –
10
Petraitis, Richard. “Africa’s Curse: Magical Beliefs”. In: The Reall News. Vol. 8 (4) April 2000, p. 6.
11
West, Harry. 2001, p. 121.
12
West, Harry. 2001, p. 121.
13
West, Harry. 2001, p. 121.
14
Scott uses the phrase to refer to some of the modes and forms that he argue are adopted by powerless
people in resisting against their immediate bosses (Scott, C. James. p. 29)
-4-
Ngoveni Lawrence
“those who seek to extract labour, food, rents, and interests from them.”15 Scott argues
pilfering, feigned ignorance, slander, arson, sabotage, and so forth – are unlikely to do
more than marginally affect the various forms of exploitation that peasants confront.16
coordination or planning; they often represent a form of individual self-help; and they
typically avoid direct symbolic confrontation with authority or with elite norms.”17
significant in examining ways in which the old people in the novel subvert detective
work.
of the nationalist struggle and civil war.18 Couto positions the text in post-war
circumstances as the country attempts to come to terms with its past. In an interview,
he says that although the end of the war marked the turning point in the history of the
country, both social and political, there were certain “wounds” that remained
unattended.19 Although Couto is not explicit about these, it is clear that the text
tension involved in the construction of memory, particularly that between and within
the ruling body and the masses. Although, as Phillip Rothwell points out, “Under the
Frangipani is at some level a reflection on what the civil war had done to the
15
Scott, C. James, p. 29.
16
Scott, C. James, p. 29.
17
Scott, C. James, p.29.
18
Chabal, Patrick. The Postcolonial Literature of Lusophone Literature. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand
University Press, 1996, p. 80
19
The information has been obtained in a personal interview with Mia Couto, a copy of which is
attached at the end.
20
Rothwell, Phillip. A Postmodern Nationalist: Truth Orality, and Gender in the Works of Mia Couto.
Lewisburg: Bucknell University Press, 2004, p. 31.
-5-
Ngoveni Lawrence
European languages from other parts of formerly colonized Africa,” owing to the fact
that it came out as the product of an African elite, and their rebellion against
was to witness the colonial war fought between FRELIMO and the Portuguese
regime, and after gaining independence from Portugal in 1975, the country was
devastated by drought.”23 Yet, in Under the Frangipani, the author does not attempt
to figure the impact of violence per se, but how violent occurrences are remembered
or/and suppressed.
This study deals with the manner in which Couto’s Under the Frangipani, written in
post-war circumstances, make an intervention into the popular debate on memory and
how memory is manipulated to suit certain missions as well as the manner in which
memories of the weak find space in the making of collective memory. It also attempts
to expand and in the same vein to complicate further the manner in which fictional
narratives engage with the processes of memory. Couto stretches the theme of
consolidates the observation that Couto has not only pioneered the emergence of a
21
Collemanice, J. E. A Study of African Literary Expression in the Portuguese Language: Poetry and
Liberation. USA: University Microfilms International, 1979, p. i.
22
Collemanice, J. E, p.i.
23
Hume, Cameron. Ending Mozambique’s War: The Role of Mediation and Good Office. Washington,
D.C: United States Institute of Peace Press, 1994, p. 3.
-6-
Ngoveni Lawrence
relatively “new” genre in Mozambique, but also points to a new direction of literary
studies on Mozambican literature are in the Portuguese language, owing to the fact
that the country is a former Portuguese colony, there are a handful of publications in
a genre at the time. Most literatures that were produced then came out in the form of
poetry, which was aimed at challenging the atrocities of the Portuguese regime.25
Patrick Chabal points out that this was so because “it [poetry] was the medium most
likely to elude censorship.”26 Hamilton singles out Luis Bernardo Honwana as one of
the first writers in Mozambique to have introduced short story writing into the
stories, Nos matamos o cao tinhoso, “has set a direction for the modern prose fiction
Mozambique. Couto did not only pioneer the emergence of a relatively ‘new genre’ in
demonstrate the intricacy involved in the formation of memory and the need for
24
It is important to emphasize that the project does not use Mia Couto’s writing to trace the history of
Lusophone literature (even though at times this study draws on earlier studies on Mozambican
literature); neither does it claim to exhaust the multiple facets of Mozambican literature.
25
Hamilton, R. G. Voices from an Empire. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1975, p. 214.
26
Chabal, Patrick, p. 75.
27
Hamilton, R. G, p. 213.
28
Hamilton, R. G, p. 213.
-7-
Ngoveni Lawrence
Couto’s innovative narrative style and approach to the problematic of memory locates
his works among contemporary fiction writers in Africa, such as Ben Okri, Sony
Labou Tansi, and M. G. Vassanji. This is a group of writers that emerged in the mid-
1980s and are known for their experimental narrative approach. As with most
contemporary writers in Africa and the diaspora, Couto’s writing “signals a clean
break with the nationalist literature of the [late] colonial period.”29 It attempts to pave
Mozambique. Couto’s narratives suggest that the realities of the country are complex
The fact that the narrator of the novel is a dead man, makes it easier for the narrative
Africa “shows that history is not merely linear, but quite arbitrary and intricate.”30 As
clearly undermined and reality is narrated from different angles. This is also in line
post-colony.”31
Famished Road. Alatubosun Ogunsanwo observes that Ben Okri’s The Famished
29
Mashishi, Thapelo. Narrating Post-colonial Crisis: The Post-colonial State and The Individual in the
Works of Sony Labou Tansi (M. A. Research Report) Johannesburg: University of the Witwatersrand,
1999, p. 3.
30
Mashishi, Thapelo. 1999. p. 3.
31
Mashishi, Thapelo. 1999. p. 3.
-8-
Ngoveni Lawrence
figures scripted in Ben Okri’s novel – such as the story of the abiku (a spirit child) –
are similar to those given treatment by other Nigerian writers such as Chinua Achebe
and Wole Soyinka: “Okri’s novel aims to explore the ontology of the abiku.”33 “As a
result, “the text avoids the conventional division between terrestrial reality and the
‘other reality,’ between the ‘factual’ and the ‘mythical,’ just as postmodernism defies
conventions and crosses the boundaries between history and fiction, and by extension
between life and art.”34 This allows the narrative to cut across boundaries, and in the
process provide space for multiplicity. In Couto’s novel, the narrator’s oscillation
between the world of the dead and that of the living seems to achieve a similar effect
characters. This is mainly because his narratives seem to be shaped chiefly by the
belief that “every man is a race;” that collective identities are deceptive since each
person is unique. For instance, the narrator in the short story, “Rosa Caramela”
describes the hunchback protagonist as “a mixture of all the races.”35 The narrator
says that “her body crossed many a continent.”36 As a result of their globalized
stature, characters bring experiences and memories of differing nature into the
narrative.
32
Ogunsanwo, Alatubosun. “Intertextuality and Post-Colonial Literature in Ben Okri’s The Famished
Road.” In: Reasearch in African literature. Vol. 26(1) 1995, p. 41.
33
Ogunsanwo, Alatubosun. 1995, p. 44.
34
Ogunsanwo, Alatubosun. 1995, p. 44.
35
Couto, Mia. “Rosa Caramela.” Every Man is a Race. p. 1.
36
Couto, Mia. “Rosa Caramela.” Every Man is a Race. p. 1.
-9-
Ngoveni Lawrence
the short stories. In “Narrative Strategies in Mia Couto’s Terra Sonâmbula” she
contends that “Couto’s earlier stories [in Voices Made Night] tended to inscribe
concurs that Couto’s characters are indeed deluded and somehow consumed by the
emptiness of their environs, she maintains that it is through such portrayal that the
author is able to transcend the stereotypical representation of the poor. She says: “as
readers we are not only asked to marvel at people’s poverty, but at the extent to which
conditions of severe poverty and suffering are able to inform their distorted view of
reality.”38 Although Goncalves slightly differs with Effendi, she seems also to
acknowledge Effendi’s point, for she explicitly admires the manner in which Mia
Couto “maps the psychic terrain they [characters] explore by venturing through the
the psychic terrain in Terra Sonâmbula is germane to his second novel, Under the
Frangipani. In Under the Frangipani, this terrain emerges through the use of
storytelling. The terrain also assists in fulfilling the author’s desire to include multiple
contending voices.
37
Goncalves, Fiona. “Narrative Strategies in Mia Couto’s Terra Sonâmbula”. Current Writing 7(1)
1995, p. 60.
38
Effendi, Karima. “Mia Couto’s Voices Made Night as an Alternative Response to the “Historical
Imagination”. Interaction 5 (1996), p. 99.
39
Goncalves, Fiona, p. 60.
- 10 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
Another form of narration that identifies contemporary writing is the overt disputation
different angles that are constantly in conflict with each other. The story continuously
generates numerous perspectives or truths. It is also important to note that while Ben
Okri’s Azaro is able to “apprehend both worlds simultaneously and finds them both
Dan Ojwang’s observation that “in The Gunny Sack, Moyez Vassanji scripts a story
that provides the conditions for, and launches into, its own critique.”41 This form of
among certain nationalist and post-colonial writers. Couto does not necessarily script
memory.
In her book, Against Amnesia: Contemporary Women Writers and The Crises of
novels.42 The elderly people’s attitude to Izidine’s investigation and their emphasis on
the spontaneity of memory typifies this deliberate tendency to script what would seem
to be an antihistorical text. The elderly people believe that it is not important to search
40
Ogunsanwo, Alatubosun. “Intertextuality and Post-Colonial Literature in Ben Okri’s The Famished
Road”. 1995, p. 44.
41
Ojwang, D. O. Writing Migracy and Ethnicity: The Politics of Identity in East African Indian
Literature. Johannesburg: University of Witwatersrand, 2004, p. 287.
42
Peterson, Nancy J. Against Amnesia: Contemporary Women Writers and the Crises of Historical
Memory. Philadelphia: University of Pennysylvania Press, 2001, p. 56.
- 11 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
As with most contemporary fiction in Africa, Couto’s narratives combine allegory and
magic realism in representing the past. The use of allegory in the text is intertwined
with some of the established modes of magic realism. This study does not intend to
categorize Mia Couto as a magic realist per se, but is interested in the manner in
narration adopted in the novel, for instance, typifies magic realist texts’ propensity to
adopt a “double sided mirror”43 which reflects, and at times collates, two worlds. The
fact that the narrator of the novel is a dead man enables the narrative, as Couto
fantasy and reality which runs through all his [Couto’s] fiction.”45 On the basis of this
observation Deirdre Byrne observes that Couto’s mode has much in common with the
great South American master of magic realism, Gabriel Garcia Marquez: “Couto
records with the unruffled uniformity of diction supernatural and mythical incidents
such as Stephen Gray, skeptically caution against the hasty categorization of Mia
elements in Couto’s prose, he suggests we take care not to overrate it.”47 Long-Innes
43
Faris, B. Wendy. “Scheherazade’s Children: Magic Realism and Postmodern Fiction.” In: Magic
Realism: Theory, History, Community. (Eds.) Zamora L. P. and Faris B. W. Durham & London: Duke
University Press, 1995, p. 172.
44
The information has been obtained in a personal interview with Mia Couto.
45
Long-Innes, Chesca. “The Psychopathology of Post-colonial Mozambique: Mia Couto’s Voices
Made Night”. In: American Imago, Vol. 55, No. 1, 1. 1998, 158.
46
Byrne, Deirdre. “Versions of Transgression: Recent South African Writing.” Current Writing, Vol. 4.
1992, 143 – 148.
47
Long-Innes, Chesca. 1998, 158.
- 12 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
adds that “to this critic [Gray], Couto’s use of fantasy is best understood as a form of
‘grounded in social realities often too strong to take without some decoration: child
Goncalves believes that “it would be inadequate to categorize his [Couto’s] fiction as
magical Realism.”49 She prefers instead the concept “dialogic integration” – a term
and linguistic innovation.”50 Long-Innes argues that the inclination to categorize Mia
its psychoanalytic perspective. He suggests that one can best make sense of Couto’s
While this research report accepts Long-Innes’ view, it submits that it would be
logical not to deny the association of Couto’s narratives with magic realism, since
some of the stories seemingly reflect some of the established modes of the technique.
Mozambicans is, as Effendi observes, “grounded on a conscious and clear sense of the
Mozambican reality.”52 This argument echoes Patrick Chabal’s assertion that although
the stories are “never overtly tragic, Mia Couto’s contos nevertheless discloses the
strongly that Couto’s fiction provides an alternative and more creative re-reading of
48
Long-Innes, Chesca. 1998, 158.
49
Goncalves, Fiona. 1995, p. 61.
50
Goncalves, Fiona. 1995, p. 61.
51
Long-Innes, Chesca. 1998, p.159.
52
Effendi, Karima, p. 99.
53
Chabal, Patrick, p.79.
- 13 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
Mozambican reality and history.54 Indeed, as Michael Chapman notes, “the systematic
is clear in the narrative and thematic concerns that the author seeks to make an
memory in a war-torn Mozambique and at the same time highlighting the need for the
it is equally important to note the stories’ urge to highlight contending voices, beliefs
and practices.
scholars who have attempted to study the allegorical text, such as Deborah Madsen,
James Ogude, and Stephen Slemon have identified the allegorical text’s strong
around the subject of allegory, not much has been done to interrogate the manner in
which the allegorical text imagines and complicates memory. Under the Frangipani
not only raises the reader’s awareness of the past, but it also crafts a fresh form that
imagines the tensions involved in the construction of such a past. In its metaphoric
narrative. Couto dedicates much space to the testimonies rendered by the characters.
54
Effendi, Karima, p.98 (Effendi’s argument is echoed by Andre Brink in his article, “stories of
history: re-imagining the past in the post-apartheid narrative”: In: Negotiating The Past: The Making of
Memory in South Africa. (eds.) Nuttall, S. and Carli Coetzee. Cape Town: Oxford University Press,
1988, p. 30)
55
Chapman, Michael. “Angola and Mozambique. National Ideas and Pragmatic Realities”. In:
Southern African Literature. Pietermaritzburg: University of Natal Press, p. 291.
- 14 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
His characters are themselves both the centre of memory and symbols of the negation
However, it is vital to underscore that this reading of Couto’s Under the Frangipani
Genre, traces the different definitions of the concept and the way in which it is often
structuralism into the field of genre theory. Inspired by her assertion that “what one
reader means by allegory is not necessarily shared by the next reader,”56 Madsen
identifies two ways in which allegory is understood: firstly, she mentions the classical
Greek, Roman, and Judaistic models, which identify allegory as “a species of rhetoric
that operates in the same way as metaphor;”57 secondly she writes of allegory as
metonymy, one that has been “developed as part of the typological explication of the
two biblical testaments by the Gospel writers and latter patristic exegetes.”58 Perhaps
a clearer distinction between the two ways in which allegory is understood is that the
imported to the text and became an intrinsic and mystical core of meaning embedded
on the text by God and perceptible to divinely inspired readers.”59 The refuge for old
people in Couto’s novel has been coded in such a way that it is weighed with external
the way in which memory is constituted and used in ordering history. Allegory as
56
Madsen, L. Deborah. Rereading of Allegory: A Narrative Approach to Genre. New York:
ST. Martin’s Press, 1994, p. 2.
57
Madsen, L. Deborah, p. 1.
58
Madsen, L. Deborah, p. 1.
59
Madsen, L. Deborah, p. 3.
- 15 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
Frangipani.
James Ogude’s book, Ngugi’s Novels and African History: Narrating the Nation,
Slemon, Ogude aligns himself with the theoretical assumption that allegory is a
popular mode for recuperating the past and ordering history.60 He writes that “the
allegorical text...is bound to the authority of the past and is often deployed in the
the Frangipani, as an allegorical text that creates an awareness of the past, but it is
equally important to note that the text also provides an image of the tensions involved
in the construction of such past. Therefore, allegory in Couto’s text serves mainly two
functions: firstly, that of raising the awareness of the Mozambican past; secondly, that
the present, a phenomenon that is demonstrated also by the tendency to fuse the world
that “in periods of fragmentation and displacement, allegory is often the mode best
suited for piecing history together.”62 Ogude contends that for Ngugi, who is a
60
Ogude, James. Ngugi’s Novels and African History: Narrating the Nation. London: Pluto Press,
1999, p. 45.
61
Ogude, James. 1999, p. 45. (see, Slemon, Stephen. “Monuments of Empire: Allegory/Counter-
Discourse/Post-Colonial Writing”. In: Kunapipi, 9: 3 (1987) p.4 -5.)
62
Ogude, James. 1999, p. 45.
- 16 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
of rereading the imperial myths and their social agents in the postcolonial state.”63 I
argue that Under the Frangipani’s use of allegory is intended to reflect upon the
tensions that may hinder such emergence. And it seems to me that Couto chose to
Memory and its construction in the present, therefore, form an integral dimension of
Couto’s narratives. In the following section the manner in which memory has been
studied and theorized in recent years is considered. Although my aim was to focus on
literary materials published in the southern region of Africa, David Thelen’s article,
issue of the Journal of American History, is fairly useful in engaging with the
how memory is constituted, the motives that accompany such constitution, and how
culture determines the manner in which memory is recovered and figured among the
characters. Thelen says, “in each construction of memory, people reshape, omit,
distort, combine, and reorganise…details with elements from different periods in the
past.”64 These distortions, omissions, and figurations of memory are the consequence
of both internal and external influences, some of which are mentioned above. The
synthesis of the world of the dead with that of the living in Under the Frangipani
demonstrates the manner in which such selective methods are likely to happen, and
how in turn they are likely to lead on to the formation of “mythico-history.”65 Thelen
63
Ogude, James. 1999, p. 46.
64
Thelen, David. “Introduction: Memory and American History”. In: Journal of American History. 75,
4, 1989, p. 1120.
65
See Malkki, Liisa H. Purity and Exile: Violence, Memory and National Cosmology Among Hutu
Refugees in Tanzania. Chicago & London: The University of Chicago. 1995
- 17 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
also reminds us that the constitution of memory is relatively determined by the time at
which it takes place, and mostly “in response to the changing circumstances.”66
While Thelen generally covers most of the technologies used in the construction of
memory, Adam Ashforth focuses specifically on how political motives shape this
construction. In his article, “The Xhosa Cattle Killing and the Politics of Memory”,
Ashforth engages with the multiple interpretations attending to the famous story of
Nongqawuse and the demise of the Xhosa kingdom. He identifies three versions of
the story as articulated by the colonialists, the Xhosa chiefs and the missionaries.
not rule out the possibility that there could be other versions, but emphasizes the idea
that “everyone who knows the story it seems has a way of telling it to further some
more or less political objectives.”67 The two observations of Thelen and Ashforth –
that the construction of memory is extremely influenced by the dynamics of time and
that it is contested through political motives – are useful in analysing the manner in
which time and motive shape the construction of memory by Couto’s characters.
Wole Soyinka’s question – “how far back should memory reach? how deeply into the
constructed: the distortions, omissions, and figurations, all of which make it almost
66
Thelen, David, p. 1118.
67
Ashforth, Adam. “The Xhosa Cattle Killing and the Politics of Memory”. In: Sociological Forum,
Vol. 6, No. 3, 1991, p.581.
68
Soyinka, Wole. “Memory, Truth, and Healing”. In: Amadiume, I & An’na’im, A. (eds.) The Politics
Of Memory: Truth, Healing & Social Justice. 2000, p. 21.
- 18 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
for Soyinka “the answer that springs spontaneously to mind is that memory is not
governed by the statute of limitations, and that collective memory is the very warp
and weft of the tapestry of history that makes society.”69 However, this study
The permeable frontier between life and death, the contradictory testimonies of the
old people, and the refusal to abide to linear form of narrative in Couto’s Under the
Frangipani transcends the question of distance by unmasking the secrets of death and
Terdiman’s book, Present Past: Modernity and the Memory Crisis, is interesting to
consider in regard to the proposed interaction between the past and the present.
According to Terdiman, “memory is the modality of our relation to the past,” “it is the
faculty that sustains continuity in collective and individual memory,” and it is a means
through which the past reveals itself to, and shapes, the present. 70 Memory is seen to
be ubiquitous, and assists in providing meaning to the present. Terdiman believes that
resultant generation of meaning highly intricate. He believes that one way to deal with
recollection of the past is to historicize it.71 He argues that “seeing the phenomenon of
temporal series, may provide some definition of the problematic that memory
69
Soyinka, Wole, p. 21.
70
Terdiman, Richard. Present Past: Modernity and The Memory Crisis. Ithaca and London: Cornell
University Press, 1993, p. 7.
71
Terdiman, Richard, p. 9.
- 19 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
periodizing it.
without reference to the post-apartheid South African body politic and civil society’s
engagement with individual and community memory at the Truth and Reconciliation
memory and the making of collective memory. There are three main issues that seem
insistence on the truth, which was seen by many to ignore the complexities attending
to the formulation of memory; secondly, is the idea that testimonies were rendered
orally and publicly; lastly, some scholars questioned the commission’s ability to deal
with trauma.
Sarah Nuttall and Carli Coetzee’s book, published at the time when the TRC was still
in progress, is constituted of diverse articles that make an intervention into the process
of remembrance, forgetting and forgiveness and the making of history, but implicitly
respond to the question posed by Soyinka above. While all the articles are useful, I am
72
Terdiman, Richard, p. 9.
73
Mitten, Richard. “Minerva’s Owl also Flies by Day: on History, Memory and Identity in
Contemporary Austria”. In: How to Remember things with Words: A Colloquium on Language, Truth
and the Past. Cape Town: University of the Western Cape, 1997, p. 7.
- 20 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
Past in Post-apartheid Narrative”. Although Nuttall and Coetzee argue that the article
“can be read as a theorization of his [Brink’s] own recent creative writing,”74 this
research report focuses in the way in which it engages with fiction’s intervention into
the continuing debate on memory. Brink believes that fiction offers an “alternative
recitation of the past.”75 In re-telling the past, fiction is able to re-order the history of
the Mozambican people by transcending their differing worlds. For this reason, this
study examines the ways in which the past is told in Couto’s Under the Frangipani.
The second chapter of the study examines Mia Couto’s imagination of the
construction of official memory and its subsequent tension with unofficial memory. It
tackles the novel’s portrayal and subversion of the elite’s obsession with exclusionary
methods of recovering the past. The officials, who remain unidentified in the novel
(with the exception of Izidine and Vastsome), are preoccupied with inventing ‘new’
histories while at the same time effacing certain memories through strategic
particular mode of resuscitating and reciting the past. In the novel, officials seem to
of the day Vastsome Excellency was killed; that of finding out the individual or a
group of people responsible for the murder. The edifice of this investigation is
maintained through labelling (the tagging of past events), which comes with certain
authorized meanings. The notes that Izidine makes throughout his research are to be
documented and considered not only as evidence but also as history. The novel seems
to suggest that the officials’ approach confines memory and history to certain
74
Nutall, Sarah and Coetzee Carli. (eds.) In: Negotiating the past: The Making of Memory in South
Africa. Cape Town: Oxford University Press, 1998, p. 3.
75
Kim, Jodi. “Haunting History: Violence, Trauma, and the politics of Memory in Nora Okja Keller’s
Comfort Woman.” In: Hitting Critical Mass. Vol.06, No. 1. 1999, p. 61.
- 21 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
function as a tool through which memories that underwrite the power of the
nationalists are created. This reading of the text assists in understanding its portrayal
and subversion of the officials’ obsession with the logic and lust for power and the
through stories. In telling stories, we are able to transcend putative boundaries, and
go beyond their immediate environments into the world of dreams. The novel
suggests that storytelling is one of the most effective tools in the formation of memory
between varying worlds. The old people in the novel rely on storytelling in their
people in the novel, memory is, as Couto himself puts it, “not a faithful reproduction
of the past, but its reconstruction by fictional mechanism.”76 The novel seems to be
shaped by this view in that it creates a permeable frontier between the world of the
dead and that of the living, a practice often associated with magic realism. Ermelindo
Mucanga, the primary narrator’s textual resuscitation after his physical death, seems
to demonstrate that memory exists in, and interacts with, the present. This interaction
between past and present shapes the old people’s construction of their memories and
how they subvert the methodical way in which the officials construct memory.
Through the use of storytelling, the novel provides space for merging a diversity of
historical accounts.
76
The information has been obtained in a personal interview with Mia Couto, a copy of which is
attached at the end of this research report.
- 22 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
Since the old people rely on storytelling to construct memory, orality becomes
Izidine’s investigation, the old characters divert from his questions, and focus on their
(sometimes in contrast with where they originated), and traditional customs. In doing
so, they rely on oral forms such as proverbs and mythologies. Orality, therefore,
allows the narrative to create a space where differing worlds and viewpoints coexist
In the concluding chapter, this study argues that while the novel points towards
unable to transcend them. In its effort to foster the spirit of inclusivity by dissuading
the focus of the investigation and opening space for the old people’s stories, the novel
seems to give weight to the stories of the elderly people. In other words the novel
remains biased in favour of the elderly people’s stories and as a result sustains the
formation of memory is to some extent simplistic, because it claims that all forms of
memory are valid or useful in the formation of the country. This chapter will therefore
It is also important to note that although Mia Couto has written and published
extensively, only two volumes of his short stories (Voices Made Night and Every Man
is a Race) and two novels (Under the Frangipani and The Last Flight of Flamingo)
- 23 -
Ngoveni Lawrence
have been translated into English. It seems to me that there are commonalities in the
manner in which some of the stories engage with the contestation of memory in a
post-colony, and I have tended to draw on some of them in the hope of illuminating
the discussion.
- 24 -