Panashe Chigumadzi
Panashe Chigumadzi is a Zimbabwean-born journalist, essayist and novelist, who was raised in South Africa.
Background
Born in Harare, Zimbabwe, in 1991, Chigumadzi grew up in South Africa.She has published her writing in a variety of media. She has been a columnist for The Guardian, Die Zeit, The New York Times, The Washington Post, New York Review of Books and Chimurenga. She was a founder of VANGUARD, a magazine designed to give space to young, black South African women interested in how queer identities, pan-Africanism and Black Consciousness intersect. At the start of her career, Chigumadzi worked as a reporter for CNBC Africa.
Chigumadzi draws on the history of Zimbabwe in her work, by exploring national and personal histories and identities. Her first novel, Sweet Medicine, was published in 2015, winning the K Sello Duiker Memorial Literary Award. Her 2017 narrative essay These Bones Will Rise Again drew on Shona perspectives to explore the concept of the "Mothers of the Nation" and interrogating perceptions of Nehanda Charwe Nyakasikana in Zimbabwe.
While studying and writing on the legacies of Zimbabwe's struggle for independence, Chigumadzi also writes about modern identities for southern Africans. She has written on the complexities of identity dismantling the notion of a colourblind, post-Apartheid South Africa, through a reclamation of the term "coconut". She is outspoken about the need for decolonisation at national and at personal levels. Her 2019 essay "Why I'm No Longer Talking to Nigerians About Race" discussed her experience at the Aké Arts and Book Festival on a panel discussing whether Black Lives Matter has relevance in Africa. Chigumadzi argued that, yes, in a continent with such different experiences of racialisation under colonialism, it did.
In 2015, Chigumadzi was Programme Curator of the first Abantu Book Festival. In addition to her writing on literature and literary criticism, she regularly appears on BBC World Service radio. She is also a contributor to the 2019 anthology New Daughters of Africa, edited by Margaret Busby.
In late2021, Chigumadzi wrote on the concept of the Ubuntu philosophy for The Guardian and how restoration is a necessary part of reconciliation in postcolonial societies such as South Africa. Indeed:
Writings
Books
- Sweet Medicine – a novel exploring the 2008 economic crisis in Zimbabwe
- These Bones Will Rise Again – a mixture of memoir and historical essay exploring nation-building in Zimbabwe
- ''Beautiful Hair for Landless People''
Acknowledgements
Awards
- K Sello Duiker Memorial Literary Award in 2016 for Sweet Medicine
- Ruth First Journalism Fellowship, 2015
Reception