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  • Zimbabwe's International Relations: Fantasy, Reality and the Making of the State by Julia Gallagher
  • Timothy Scarnecchia
Julia Gallagher. Zimbabwe's International Relations: Fantasy, Reality and the Making of the State. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017. xiv + 184 pp. Online ISBN: 9781316869529

Julia Gallagher's Zimbabwe's International Relations: Fantasy, Reality and the Making of the State will appeal to a much wider group than just Zimbabweanists, as Gallagher is making much larger claims here about the way people's own views of their national identity, what she calls "self statehood," reflect and shape the nation state itself and its role in international relations (IR). Those who are interested in the transference of negative characteristics from the British to the Chinese in recent years will find this discussion illuminating. The text covers many important topics, such as non-elite Zimbabweans' views on politics, international relations, Robert Mugabe and the ruling ZANU-PF, and Morgan Tsvangirai and the Movement for Democratic Change (MDC). Gallagher's source material for the book are two hundred interviews carried out between 2011 and 2014 in Harare, Chitungwiza, Bulawayo, and a rural community in Mashonaland Central. The theoretical structure she provides rests on the notion that Africans are often seen as dependent on community for their identity while Europeans are not. Gallagher first combines the concepts of Tswana identity formation (via the work of Jean and John Comaroff) and the work of psychoanalyst Melanie Klein, who emphasized the individual's responsibility for social identity in her influential work. Gallagher then brings these concepts into focus with more traditional Freudian psychoanalysis and also Hegelian concepts of the relationship between the individual and the state to provide a new way of examining how Zimbabweans internalize their views of the outside world to define their own sense of self statehood.

Much of the discussion of Zimbabwean views of Britain are in fact cast as a familial relationship. Britain, according to Gallagher's formulation, is seen as a former colonial power that projected many valuable material and cultural qualities onto Zimbabwe but which, given the violence of colonialism, can never be fully embraced. Much like an abusive parent, Britain is portrayed as the foil that encapsulates the good and the bad of what Zimbabwe became under Mugabe's and ZANU-PF's rule. Using Freud's conception of the "uncanny," Gallagher argues that the problematic [End Page E45] relationship between Tony Blair and Robert Mugabe in the 2000s exemplified this relationship, not so much as fantasy, but in the sense of "the denial of internal confusion and disintegration, the projection of it onto another and a refusal even to acknowledge the disturbing qualities of the uncanny other" (47). According to Gallagher, "The theme of evil intent is found in ideas of rape, castration and despoliation. For Mugabe, the colonisers and foreigners are those who spoil and attempt to rape or castrate the country by stealing land, the 'mother of African being,' by interfering with elections, ultimately by trying to recolonize" (47).

The Chinese are also portrayed through informants as "uncanny," along with the North Koreans. Gallagher states, "I think that the uncanniness of the Chinese or the Koreans is seen in the ways in which they are assumed to possess the qualities of the bad states. As Freud points out, something that is truly alien cannot be uncanny: it cannot convey that really frightening sense that is only gained through an encounter with something that is familiar but denied" (72–73). Gallagher then interprets what her informants described as characteristically bad about the Chinese as their own way of recognizing and expressing what is bad about their own government. For the Zimbabweans Gallagher spoke with, this uncanny comparison between the Chinese and British expressed that they were "suspicious" of Mugabe portraying the British as "the aggressive other." While they viewed the Chinese, whom Mugabe had consistently presented as an alternative friend and ally of Zimbabwe, as embodying "…the uncanny in ways that Mugabe cannot have anticipated" (61).

After extensive discussion of her informants' views, Gallagher posits that "China's alienness is…thoroughly uncanny; the Chinese exemplify the hateful, aggressive elements of Zimbabwe itself, particularly its own predatory, selfish...

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