Goodbye, Dr Banda  
Lessons for the West From a Small African Country
Author(s): Alexander Chula
Published by Birlinn
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781788855792
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781788855792 Price: INR 844.99
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‘You may never have been, may never go, may never even have heard of the place – but Malawi will repay your attention. It is one of the smallest, poorest countries in Africa, often overlooked; but its relationship with us in the West has been extraordinary.’

In a ruined dictator’s palace, Alexander Chula – a classicist-turned-doctor, fresh out of Oxford – stumbles upon an oak treasure chest. Inside is a priceless, antique edition of Julius Caesar’s Gallic War. This unexpected talisman of Western high culture belongs to the mercurial Dr Banda, a man of many parts: scholarly physician, anti-colonial hero, brutal tyrant, and fallen philosopher-king.

Banda leads the author deep into the heart of this mysterious country, there to uncover a bizarre meeting of worlds: between one of Africa's most fascinating indigenous cultures and the best and worst of our own. Here tribal ritual collides with Greek theater; masked dancers with roving classicists; poets and pop stars with missionary-explorers; hippies and kleptocrats with long-suffering peasants.

The story is enigmatic but exhilarating, by turns edifying and deeply uncomfortable. But we would do well to examine it: Malawi presents urgent lessons which resonate piercingly in our vexed age of culture wars and identity crisis.
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‘You may never have been, may never go, may never even have heard of the place – but Malawi will repay your attention. It is one of the smallest, poorest countries in Africa, often overlooked; but its relationship with us in the West has been extraordinary.’

In a ruined dictator’s palace, Alexander Chula – a classicist-turned-doctor, fresh out of Oxford – stumbles upon an oak treasure chest. Inside is a priceless, antique edition of Julius Caesar’s Gallic War. This unexpected talisman of Western high culture belongs to the mercurial Dr Banda, a man of many parts: scholarly physician, anti-colonial hero, brutal tyrant, and fallen philosopher-king.

Banda leads the author deep into the heart of this mysterious country, there to uncover a bizarre meeting of worlds: between one of Africa's most fascinating indigenous cultures and the best and worst of our own. Here tribal ritual collides with Greek theater; masked dancers with roving classicists; poets and pop stars with missionary-explorers; hippies and kleptocrats with long-suffering peasants.

The story is enigmatic but exhilarating, by turns edifying and deeply uncomfortable. But we would do well to examine it: Malawi presents urgent lessons which resonate piercingly in our vexed age of culture wars and identity crisis.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Part One: Et in Malaŵi Ego
    • I: Dr Banda & Me
    • II: The Eton of Africa
    • III: Arrival
    • IV: The Great Tradition
    • V: Rare Birds
    • VI: The Village
    • VII: Your Prototype
    • VIII: Culture Wars
    • IX: Gradus AD Parnassum
    • X: The Communication of the Dead
    • XI: The Great Dance
    • XII: Death & Transfiguration
  • Part Two: Ngwazi
    • XIII: The Wanderer
    • XIV: The Great Dictator
    • XV: Portrait of a Tyrant
    • XVI: The Dialect of the Tribe
    • XVII: De Radiculis
  • Part Three: Only Connect
    • XVIII: In Westminster Abbey
    • XIX: Vitaï Lampada
    • XX: Even Unto Death
    • XXI: Interlude in Zanzibar
    • XXII: In Memoriam
    • XXIII: Livingstonia
    • XXIV: Ancient & Modern
    • XXV: Dea Ex Machina
    • XXVI: Palaces in the Jungle
    • XXVII: Imperial Folly
    • XXVIII: Cornstalk & Leaf
    • XXIX: On Ruins
    • XXX: The Uses of Literacy
  • Part Four: The Need for Roots
    • XXXI: Modern Times
    • XXXII: Speech Days
    • XXXIII: Things Fall Apart
    • XXXIV: The Forces of Entropy
    • XXXV: The Agony in the Garden
    • XXXVI: Lux in Tenebris
    • XXXVII: Land of Fire
    • XXXVIII: Significant Soil
    • XXXIX: Old Fields, New Corn
    • XL: Apocolocyntosis
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgements
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