menu Menu
4 articles filed in
Diaspora Dreams
Previous page Next page

Who Needs a Writer? There is More to Writing than Dollars and Cents

Zimbabwean novelist Andrew Chatora is a chronicler of unofficial history and the migrant experience. His debut novella, Diaspora Dreams, was published on March 25, 2021, by U.S-based Kharis Publishing. It was followed, in the same year, by Where the Heart Is, and now, the newly released Harare Voices and Beyond is causing ructions globally. Chatora celebrates the second anniversary of Diaspora Dreams with an essay about writerly commitment and instrumental reason.

Continue reading


Navigating New Identities – A Review of Andrew Chatora’s "Diaspora Dreams"

 

Since Zimbabwe’s transition into a migratory nation, many Zimbabwean authors have dealt with the migrant question, Brian Chikwava’s Harare North and Sue Nyathi’s Gold Diggers being two stellar examples. Andrew Chatora’s debut novel Diaspora Dreams navigates new identities that Zimbabweans living in the diaspora are forced to assume and new challenges they must overcome to survive.

Continue reading


Diaspora Dreams Conceptualizations-Inspiration – Up Close with Andrew Chatora

 

“Kundai loses it all and his subsequent charmed incantations and chants while in an English madhouse, are the most revealing part of this novel. As a result, Diaspora Dreams could be of interest to those who study the male psyche and manhood. The losing black male is still a dark area, rich with distances to […]

Continue reading


Andrew Chatora’s Debut Novella "Diaspora Dreams" Stares Back at the White Gaze

Zimbabwean writer Andrew Chatora stares back at the white gaze and immigrant alienation in his debut novella, Diaspora Dreams. The English-teacher narrator is increasingly alone between a host country that cannot validate him and a home country that is too damaged for rear-view dreams.

Continue reading



Previous page Next page

keyboard_arrow_up