ENG2603
Assignment 1 2025
Unique #:
Due Date: May 2025
Detailed solutions, explanations, workings
and references.
+27 81 278 3372
, QUESTION 1: NERVOUS CONDITIONS BY TSITSI DANGAREMBGA
2 ESSAYS PROVIDED
Tsitsi Dangarembga‘s Nervous Conditions (1988) opens with a powerful
statement by the protagonist, Tambudzai: ―I was not sorry when my brother died.‖
This startling line introduces a novel that explores the deep-rooted societal and
familial conditions that shape the lives of Zimbabwean women. Tambu‘s
reference to ―escape‖ and ―entrapment‖ in the opening paragraph sets the
thematic tone for the entire narrative, which closely interrogates how patriarchy,
colonialism, and tradition intersect to limit women‘s freedom. Through the
experiences of Tambu, Maiguru, Lucia, and Nyasha, Dangarembga highlights
different forms of entrapment—economic, intellectual, cultural—and the various
strategies of resistance and escape that women pursue. This essay explores how
each of these women navigates the structures that bind them, showing that
escape is complex, sometimes partial, and often fraught with contradiction.
Tambu, the narrator of the novel, is perhaps the most compelling representation
of both entrapment and the desire to escape. As a young girl growing up in a rural
environment, she is confined by poverty and the belief that education is a
privilege reserved for boys. Her father openly asserts that educating a girl is ―a
waste‖ because she will ultimately marry and benefit another family
(Dangarembga, 1988:15). Tambu‘s first act of rebellion is to grow and sell maize
to pay for her own school fees, demonstrating both initiative and a refusal to
accept the limitations placed on her due to her gender. Her opportunity to attend
the missionary school at the mission, and later the convent, offers her a path
toward intellectual and personal liberation. However, Dangarembga complicates
this escape by showing that education itself is entangled with colonial ideology,
which alienates Tambu from her roots and encourages assimilation into Western
norms. Tambu‘s escape, then, is not total; while she resists domestic entrapment,
she enters another system that controls her in more subtle ways.
Maiguru, Tambu‘s aunt and the wife of Babamukuru, is an educated woman with
a master‘s degree—an uncommon achievement for African women of her time.
Yet, despite her education, Maiguru is economically and socially dependent on
her husband, who embodies patriarchal authority in the family. Though she
Varsity Cube 2025 +27 81 278 3372
Assignment 1 2025
Unique #:
Due Date: May 2025
Detailed solutions, explanations, workings
and references.
+27 81 278 3372
, QUESTION 1: NERVOUS CONDITIONS BY TSITSI DANGAREMBGA
2 ESSAYS PROVIDED
Tsitsi Dangarembga‘s Nervous Conditions (1988) opens with a powerful
statement by the protagonist, Tambudzai: ―I was not sorry when my brother died.‖
This startling line introduces a novel that explores the deep-rooted societal and
familial conditions that shape the lives of Zimbabwean women. Tambu‘s
reference to ―escape‖ and ―entrapment‖ in the opening paragraph sets the
thematic tone for the entire narrative, which closely interrogates how patriarchy,
colonialism, and tradition intersect to limit women‘s freedom. Through the
experiences of Tambu, Maiguru, Lucia, and Nyasha, Dangarembga highlights
different forms of entrapment—economic, intellectual, cultural—and the various
strategies of resistance and escape that women pursue. This essay explores how
each of these women navigates the structures that bind them, showing that
escape is complex, sometimes partial, and often fraught with contradiction.
Tambu, the narrator of the novel, is perhaps the most compelling representation
of both entrapment and the desire to escape. As a young girl growing up in a rural
environment, she is confined by poverty and the belief that education is a
privilege reserved for boys. Her father openly asserts that educating a girl is ―a
waste‖ because she will ultimately marry and benefit another family
(Dangarembga, 1988:15). Tambu‘s first act of rebellion is to grow and sell maize
to pay for her own school fees, demonstrating both initiative and a refusal to
accept the limitations placed on her due to her gender. Her opportunity to attend
the missionary school at the mission, and later the convent, offers her a path
toward intellectual and personal liberation. However, Dangarembga complicates
this escape by showing that education itself is entangled with colonial ideology,
which alienates Tambu from her roots and encourages assimilation into Western
norms. Tambu‘s escape, then, is not total; while she resists domestic entrapment,
she enters another system that controls her in more subtle ways.
Maiguru, Tambu‘s aunt and the wife of Babamukuru, is an educated woman with
a master‘s degree—an uncommon achievement for African women of her time.
Yet, despite her education, Maiguru is economically and socially dependent on
her husband, who embodies patriarchal authority in the family. Though she
Varsity Cube 2025 +27 81 278 3372