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The Convert
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Description
It's 1896 in Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) and Jekesai, a young Shona girl, escapes a forced arranged marriage by converting to Christianity and becoming a protégé to an African Evangelical. As anti-colonial sentiments spread throughout the native population, Jekesai is forced to choose between her family's traditions and her newfound faith.
This Student Edition of Danai Gurira's 2012 play The Convert includes a commentary by Aviva Neff.
Table of Contents
Commentary
Playwright
Overview of her other works; connection to Blank Panther
Cultural/Historical Context & Themes
British Colonialism, enslavement, the collision of indigenous religions & Catholicism, the loss and rediscovery of faith, women's rights & gendered hierarchies, war, race, "civilization"
Relationship to other art & literature on colonisation (such as Nottage's Ruined and Soyinka's Death and the King's Horseman)
Religious radicalism: then and now
Characters
Jekesai/"Ester" as a lens for experiencing the rise of Christian colonialism
Mai Tamba's religious duality
Chilford as the "model" convert
Place
Mashona & Matabeleland / Rhodesia
Language
Different forms of language (including Chishona)
Language and culture and its links to politics and identity
Play in performance
Costume, music and movement
Influences
George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion
Black Panther
Productions and adaptations
Overview of production history and critical casting, including its world premiere at the Goodman Theatre, Chicago, and the play's place in Kwame Kwei-Armah's inaugural season at the Young Vic, London
PLAY TEXT
Notes
Product details

Published | 22 Aug 2024 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 120 |
ISBN | 9781350366299 |
Imprint | Methuen Drama |
Series | Student Editions |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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A work considering questions of racial, political and religious identity and assimilation with a provocative intelligence
Mark Lawson, Guardian
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Ms. Gurira ... chronicles the human cost of this turbulent history with impressive clarity and thoroughness ... Of course, [she] has the perspective of a hundred and more years of history to draw on in dramatizing the moral and ethical issues involved in the missionary impulse, and its alliance with the forces of colonization. It is to her credit that she rarely allows The Convert to devolve into an admonishing tract. There is sympathy in her depiction of all the play's characters, who cannot see how powerless they are to control their own fates. Believers in the old ways or adherents of the new, they are united in being caught in the grip of forces larger than themselves.
Charles Isherwood, New York Times