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Jack Mapanje

Autor von Of Chameleons and Gods

10+ Werke 114 Mitglieder 1 Rezension Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

Über den Autor

Winner of the Rotterdam International Poetry Prize and the PEN Freedom-to-Write award, Mapanje was jailed by Malawian authorities without trial from September 1987 to August 11, 1991---a situation that called international attention to this many-sided genius. A poet, folklorist, editor, and mehr anzeigen teacher, Mapanje is the founder and editor of Odi: A Journal of Malawi Literature and Kalulu: Journal of Oral Literature. (Bowker Author Biography) weniger anzeigen

Werke von Jack Mapanje

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Against Forgetting: Twentieth-Century Poetry of Witness (1993) — Mitwirkender — 334 Exemplare
Modern Poetry from Africa (1963) — Mitwirkender, einige Ausgaben267 Exemplare
African Literature: an anthology of criticism and theory (2007) — Mitwirkender — 23 Exemplare
Out of Bounds: British, Black, and Asian Poets (2012) — Mitwirkender — 13 Exemplare

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I haven’t read a lot of poetry, especially modern poetry. However, some of the stuff I have read ranks alongside my favourite novels in terms of the depth of response they produce in me. ‘The Last of the Sweet Bananas’ contains very large excerpts from four of Mapanje’s books and a few new (in 2003) poems. The four books chart Mapanje’s feelings about his home country, firstly the hope after Malawi’s independence from the British Empire, then the disappointment watching an autocratic dictator (Hastings Banda) take control, and finally the bitterness of his own imprisonment without charge and his forced exile to Britain. I though the first two collections (‘Mau’ and ‘Of Chameleons and Gods’) were good, the third (‘The Chattering Wagtails of Mikuyu Prison’) was excellent, but it was the fourth (‘Skipping Without Ropes’) that really blew me away. In that book Mapanje expresses the bitterness of his 4 years in jail, recalls the fates of friends and political figures ‘accidentalised’ in the prisons by the Banda regime, and writes about his new life in Europe. I think it is the way in which Mapanje switches focus from a brutal prison and murderous regime in Malawi to the twee streets of York (a city I know very well) and Norway, then back to observe genocides in Rwanda and the killing of Ken Saro-Wiwa in Nigeria. As he does this, you are always aware of the identity of the writer, providing a continuity between very different situations and parts of the globe, reminding the reader that all these things exist in one world, and that one world bears a collective responsibility. Without reading works like Mapanje’s, it can sometimes be difficult (for me, anyway) to remember that a Malawian prison and the Bridlington seaside can both be on the same planet at the same time. His writing is angry and direct, and he is bitter and judgmental. This is a wonderful collection. If you can’t get your hands on the whole thing, I would suggest trying to get ‘Skipping Without Ropes’, but really, all of these books are worth experiencing.… (mehr)
 
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GlebtheDancer | Sep 27, 2007 |

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Werke
10
Auch von
4
Mitglieder
114
Beliebtheit
#171,985
Bewertung
4.1
Rezensionen
1
ISBNs
12
Favoriten
1

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