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'In 1981 Jack Mapanje was a budding poet and scholar in Malawi. His
first collection of poetry, Of Chameleons and Gods had just been
published and reviewers were already hailing it as the work of a
new and important African voice. His scholarly work in linguistics
was also transforming language and literary studies in Central
Africa and drawing international attention to the works of writers
and critics from the region. Mapanje's poetry was remarkable not
only because of his keen sense of sound and place, but also its
tense relationship with its context: here was a compelling lyrical
voice, producing a musical and touching verse in a country that was
under the iron heel of a self-proclaimed dictator and
life-president, Kamuzu Banda, Ngwazi. That Mapanje had been able to
write such powerful poetry under official rules of censorship was a
remarkable feat. But two years later, the state ordered the
withdrawal of Mapanje's poetry from all schools, institutions of
higher learning, and bookstores. In 1987, after attending a
regional language conference in Zimbabwe, Mapanje was arrested by
the Malawian secret police and bundled off to prison where he was
to stay under lock and key, without any formal charges, until 1991.
This book is a recollection of those years in prison. Written in
the tradition of the African prison memoir, and often echoing the
works of other famous prison graduates such as Wole Soyinka (The
Man Died) and Ngugi wa Thiong'o (Detained), the memoir represents
Mapanje's retrospective attempt to explain the cause and terms of
his imprisonment, to recall, in tranquillity as it were, the terror
of arrest, the process of incarceration, and the daily struggle to
hold on to some measure of spiritual freedom.' - Simon Gikandi,
Professor English, Princeton University Jack Mapanje is a poet and
linguist and was head of the English Department, Chancellor
College, University of Malawi when he was arrested and detained
without charge or trial in 1987. After an international campaign,
which included his being promoted as one of Amnesty International's
'Prisoners of Conscience', he was released in 1991. His published
works include: Of Chameleons and Gods (1981); The Chattering
Wagtails of Mikuyu Prison (1993); Skipping Without Ropes (1998);
Last of the Sweet Bananas (2004); and Beasts of Nalunga(2007).
Jack Mapanje was imprisoned without trial or charge by Malawi's
dictator Hastings Banda for nearly four years, chronicling his
prison experiences with dogged wit in his previous books. In
Greetings from Grandpa - his sixth collection - Mapanje is still
effervescent, with his wry humour defiantly intact. Some
treacherous African tyrants may have been deposed or died horrific
deaths, leaving their snoops in exile washing cars to survive - but
these are mere metaphors of another life. The narratives in
Greetings from Grandpa are mellow and cheerful testimonies of the
sojourn of the human spirit as it survives freedom under
implausible circumstances, whether at home or in exile.
Grandchildren are born, calming the nerves of exile; dear friends
back home die of AIDS, unsettling gentle memories; China and Asia
arrive in Africa and nobody raises a finger; greedy bureaucrats
syphon billions from accountant general's coffers; but Africa
marches on regardless, stubbornly celebrating life, sometimes in
traditional symbols; sometimes by inventing delightful beef
festivals.The collection also includes Mapanje's version of
Kalikalanje, a well-known legend among the Yao speaking African
peoples of Malawi, Mozambique and Tanzania, whose trickster hero
comes into the world endowed with knowledge of past, present,
future times and events. Kalikalanje is a lover of life, freedom,
peace, truth, justice, and above all, fun. His enemies try to kill
him only to bring destruction on themselves instead. This age-old
tale has universal appeal - and is popular with children - but its
symbolic, social-cultural-political nuance makes it especially
relevant in today's world of persistent liars and impostors. Jack
Mapanje's previous collection, Beasts of Nalunga, was shortlisted
for the Forward Prize for Best Collection in 2007. His earlier work
- including the prison poems - is available in The Last of the
Sweet Bananas: New & Selected Poems (2004).
Because he was a radical poet, Jack Mapanje was imprisoned without
trial or charge by the dictator Hastings Banda of Malawi for nearly
four years. The themes of his poetry range from the search for a
sense of dignity and integrity under a repressive regime,
incarceration, release from prison, exile and return to Africa, and
reconciliation with torturers, to the writer in Africa and the
continuing African liberation struggle in a hostile world. While
often deadly serious, Mapanje's poems are lifted by the generosity
of spirit and irrepressible humour which helped sustain him through
his prison ordeal.
Forty years after his country's independence from the British, Jack
Mapanje has returned to his concern for ordinary people in Africa
and in the world at large. These were the themes that made his
first collection Of Chameleons and Gods an inspirational book in
Malawi and throughout Africa. The new poems in Beasts of Nalunga
are boldly lyrical narratives cunningly crafted in mesmerising
spirals. His voice is still ironically cheerful, his tone
impotently angry - but confidently measured with wit and humour,
however bleak. He fears the saying 'once a prisoner always a
prisoner', and questions why prisons refuse to go away. Jack
Mapanje was imprisoned without trial or charge by the dictator
Hastings Banda for nearly four years, and chronicled his prison
experiences in many of the poems of The Chattering Wagtails of
Mikuyu Prison (1993), Skipping Without Ropes (1998) and The Last of
the Sweet Bananas: New & Selected Poems (2004). In Beasts of
Nalunga the soul is still skipping without rope, and the landscape
the soul traverses provides memorable and fresh metaphors and
symbols. Read Beasts of Nalunga as the soul struggling to liberate
itself, and fighting against the beasts of silences that were once
rampant in the African despotic regime under which Mapanje matured,
silences that threaten to continue today, even in distant homes and
variegated exiles. Beasts of Nalunga was shortlisted for the
Forward Prize for Best Collection.
African Books Collective and the Dag Hammarskjold Foundation
organised the African-Writers Publishers Seminar in Tanzania in
1998. Major African writers and publishers hammered out a 'New
Deal' for relations between the two. This practical manual includes
the 'New Deal' statement, and carries forward the work of the
seminar. Intended for the aspiring or not yet established creative
writer, the answers are given on how to get published, how
publishing works, relations with publishers, and how to find
resources. With an introduction by Niyi Osundare, the book is in
two parts. First, respected African writers and publishers
contribute their experiences and perspectives on writing and
publishing in Africa - Dapo Adeniyi, Walter Bgoya, Henry Chakava,
Cyprian Ekwensi, Taban lo Liyong, Kole Omotoso, Onsonye Tess
Onwueme, Femi Osofisan, Niyi Osundare and the late Ken Saro-Wiwa,
Yvonne Vera and Paul Tiyambe Zeleza. A massive amount of practical
information and resource materials is given on prizes, writers'
organisations, magazines, vanity and self-publishing, literary
agents, censorship, book fairs, resources for writers on the
Internet and more. James Currey, Mary Jay, Michael Norton and Hans
Zell also contribute.
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