Jack Mapanje



Jack Mapanje (born 1944) is a Malawian writer and poet. He was the head of English at the University of Malawi before being imprisoned in 1987 for his collection Of Chameleons and Gods, which indirectly criticized the administration of President Hastings Banda. He was released in 1991 and emigrated to the UK, where he worked as a teacher.

Youth
The child of Nyanja and Yao parents, Mapanje was born in Kadango Village, Mangochi District, Malawi. He received his BA in education from the University of London and worked for a time as a lecturer in Malawi before returning to the UK to study linguistics at University College, London in the early 1980s.

He later became head of the Department of Language and Linguistics at the University of Malawi.

Imprisonment
During the rule of President Hastings Banda, Mapanje was jailed without charge in 1987, apparently for publishing his poem collection Of Chameleons and Gods. The collection obliquely criticized Banda's government, and the 'chameleon' of the title refers to the disguise of personal voice Mapanje deemed necessary in order to mount a criticism of the politics at the time. The book received no official ban, but was "withdrawn from circulation". Amnesty International declared him a prisoner of conscience and campaigned for his release. Its protests included a reading of selections from Of Chameleons and Gods outside the Malawian High Commission in London by UK Nobel laureate Harold Pinter. Mapanje was also awarded the 1990 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award during his imprisonment, which carried a US$3,000 cash award. PEN's president, US novelist Larry McMurtry, stated that "the point [of the award] is to generate enough heat so Mapanje gets out of jail". Nigerian Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka and UK playwright Ronald Harwood also campaigned for his release.

Mapanje was held for three-and-a-half years before being released in 1991. After his release, he was told he needed to reapply for his previous professorship at the University of Malawi. After a lengthy delay in his application, he instead emigrated to the UK. He later wrote a memoir about the experience, And Crocodiles Are Hungry At Night, which was also adapted into a play.

Exile
After arriving in the UK, Mapanje was awarded a fellowship at York University. He later became a visiting professor at Leeds University. He also taught creative writing in prisons.

In 1994, he returned to Malawi with BBC2 to make a documentary.

Recognition

 * 1988  Rotterdam Poetry International Award
 * 1990 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award
 * 2002  African Literature Association (USA) Fonlon-Nichols Award

Publications

 * Of Chameleons and Gods, 1981
 * The Chattering Wagtails of Mikuyu Prison, 1993
 * The Last of the Sweet Bananas: New and Selected Poems, 2004
 * The Beasts of Nalunga, 2007