Malawi
Article Free PassPhysical and human geography
A good overview of the country can be found in Harold D. Nelson et al., Area Handbook for Malawi (1975, reprinted as Malawi: A Country Study, 1987). Swanzie Agnew and Michael Stubbs (eds.), Malawi in Maps (1972); and Malaŵi Dept. of Surveys, The National Atlas of Malaŵi (1983), present the country’s physical characteristics and natural and human resources in cartographic form. Margaret Read, The Ngoni of Nyasaland (1956, reissued 1970); and T. Cullen Young, Notes on the History of the Tumbuka-Kamanga Peoples in the Northern Province of Nyasaland, 2nd ed. (1970), are ethnographic studies. Sociocultural factors are addressed in John Dubbey, Warm Hearts, White Hopes (1994); Anita Spring, Agricultural Development and Gender Issues in Malawi (1995); Steven M. Friedson, Dancing Prophets: Musical Experience in Tumbuka Healing (1996); Kenneth R. Ross (ed.), God, People, and Power in Malawi: Democratization in Theological Perspective (1996), and Christianity in Malawi: A Source Book (1996); Isabel Apawo Phiri, Women, Presbyterianism, and Patriarchy: Religious Experience of the Chewa Women in Central Malawi, 3rd ed. (2007); J. Matthew Schoffeleers, Religion and the Dramatisation of Life: Spirit Beliefs and Rituals in Southern and Central Malawi, 2nd ed. (2000); Stephen Kauta Msiska, Golden Buttons: Christianity and Traditional Religion Among the Tumbuka (1997); Brian Morris, The Power of Animals: An Ethnography (1998); and Kings M. Phiri and Kenneth R. Ross (eds.), Democratization in Malawi: A Stocktaking (1998).
Economist Intelligence Unit, Country Profile: Malawi (annual), contains accurate, up-to-date information on the country’s economy, resources, and industry. Horst Dequin, Agricultural Development in Malawi (1969), is a historical study that focuses on the period between 1890 and 1967. Useful studies on politics and political development include Carolyn McMaster, Malawi: Foreign Policy and Development (1974); University of Edinburgh, Centre of African Studies, Malawi: An Alternative Pattern of Development (1985); David E. Sahn, Jehan Arulpragasam, and Lemma Merid, Policy Reform and Poverty in Malawi: A Survey of a Decade of Experience (1990); Richard Carver, Where Silence Rules: The Suppression of Dissent in Malawi (1990); Guy C.Z. Mhone (ed.), Malawi at the Crossroads: The Post-Colonial Political Economy (1992); and Trevor Cullen, Malawi: A Turning Point (1994), and Living Dangerously: A Memoir of Political Change in Malawi (1999). Useful guidebooks include Philip Briggs and Mary-Anne Bartlett, Malawi, 4th ed. (2006), a Bradt travel guide; and Martine Maurel, Visitors’ Guide to Malawi, rev. ed. (1993).
History
General works chronicling the country’s history are John G. Pike, Malawi: A Political and Economic History (1968); B.R. Rafael, A Short History of Malawi, 3rd ed. (1985); Bridglal Pachai, Malawi: The History of the Nation (1973), and Land and Politics in Malawi, 1875–1975 (1978); and Robert I. Rotberg, The Rise of Nationalism in Central Africa: The Making of Malawi and Zambia, 1873–1964 (1965, reissued 1971). Studies of Malawi’s early and colonial history include Owen J.M. Kalinga, A History of the Ngonde Kingdom of Malawi (1985); Bridglal Pachai (ed.), The Early History of Malawi (1972); Roderick J. MacDonald (ed.), From Nyasaland to Malawi: Studies in Colonial History (1975); Martin Chanock, Law, Custom, and Social Order: The Colonial Experience in Malawi and Zambia (1985, reissued 1998); Ian Linden and Jane Linden, Catholics, Peasants, and Chewa Resistance in Nyasaland, 1889–1939 (1974); George Shepperson and Thomas Price, Independent African: John Chilembwe and the Origins, Setting, and Significance of the Nyasaland Native Rising of 1915 (1958, reissued 2000); Elias C. Mandala, Work and Control in a Peasant Economy: A History of the Lower Tchiri Valley in Malawi, 1859–1960 (1990); Harry Langworthy, Africa for the African: The Life of Joseph Booth (1996); Retreat from Empire: Sir Robert Armitage in Africa and Cyprus (1998); and Colin Baker, Seeds of Trouble: Government Policy and Land Rights in Nyasaland, 1946–1964 (1993).
The role of religion in Malawian history is discussed in John McCracken, Politics and Christianity in Malawi, 1875–1940: The Impact of the Livingstonia Mission in the Northern Province, new ed. (2000); J. Matthew Schoffeleers, River of Blood: The Genesis of a Marytr Cult in Southern Malawi, c. A.D. 1600 (1992); Harvey J. Sindima, The Legacy of Scottish Missionaries in Malawi (1992); T. Jack Thompson, Christianity in Northern Malaŵi: Donald Fraser’s Missionary Methods and Ngoni Culture (1995); Matembo S. Nzunda and Kenneth R. Ross (eds.), Church, Law, and Political Transition in Malawi, 1992–1994 (1995); Andrew C. Ross, Blantyre Mission and the Making of Modern Malawi (1996); and Hubert Reijnaerts, Ann Nielsen, and J. Matthew Schoffeleers, Montfortians in Malawi: Their Spirituality and Pastoral Approach (1997).
The transition toward independence is covered in John Lloyd Lwanda, Promises, Power, and Poverty: Democratic Transition in Malawi, 1961–1993 (1996); and Colin Baker, State of Emergency: Crisis in Central Africa, Nyasaland, 1959–1960 (1997). Philip Short, Banda (1974); T. David Williams, Malawi: The Politics of Despair (1978); and John Lloyd Lwanda, Kamuzu Banda of Malawi: A Study of Promise, Power, and Paralysis (Malawi Under Dr. Banda) (1961 to 1993) (1993), discuss Malawi’s first president and his period of rule.
What made you want to look up "Malawi"? Please share what surprised you most...