Translation as destruction: Kezilahabi's adaptation of Heidegger's 'Being'.

Main author: Rettová, Alena
Format: Journal Article           
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id eprints-25643
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
description Tanzanian novelist and philosopher Euphrase Kezilahabi strives to “dismantle the resemblance of language to the world” (1985: 216) through challenging the fundamental philosophical dichotomy of subject and object. The result of this dismantling will be a new “language whose foundation is Being” (Kezilahabi 1991: 69; lugha ambayo msingi wake nikuwako). This is an expression of a new relationship between humanity and Being built on a holistic epistemology of experience and embodiment. Through “kuwako”, Kezilahabi expresses in Swahili the Heideggerian concept of Sein (Being). His adherence to Heidegger, however, puts him at risk of compromising the very foundation of his own philosophy: his continued critique of essentialism. This article argues that Kezilahabi salvages his concept of “kuwako” from these essentialist pitfalls precisely through his declared “destructive rather than deconstructive stand vis-àvis the Western philosophy of value and representation” (Kezilahabi 1985: 4). The destruction is implemented on the thematic level: a phase of “vurumai” (chaos) which destroys previous traditions of philosophy is staged in Nagona. However, translation is an even more powerful device to carry out this destruction: “kuwako” is not an innocent reiteration but a radical reformulation of Heidegger’s central philosophical concept, decisively informed by Kezilahabi’s lifelong propensity for existentialism.
format Journal Article
author Rettová, Alena
author_facet Rettová, Alena
authorStr Rettová, Alena
author_letter Rettová, Alena
title Translation as destruction: Kezilahabi's adaptation of Heidegger's 'Being'.
publisher Cambridge University Press
publishDate 2018
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/25643/