SSRC Covid-19 grantees Timwa Lipenga and Hendrina Kachapila’s essay reflects on how governments in Malawi—both British colonial and contemporary independent—have attempted to deal with pandemics. The authors’ research on Spanish flu and smallpox campaigns under colonialism provides important background for understanding Malawi’s response to Covid 19, and how Malawians varyingly follow, resist, or avoid government mandates. A tendency to manage pandemics in a top-down manner, without adequate consultation with everyday people and how they view the nature of illness, is shared by regimes past and present.
Timwa Lipenga
Timwa Lipenga is a lecturer in the Department of French at Chancellor College, University of Malawi. She has a PhD in French from the University of Aberdeen. Her research focus is interdisciplinary in nature, and includes formulations of narrative in postcolonial Africa. She has also carried out research in comparative literature, translation, and the role of language in music, journalism, and film. She is author of Lomathinda: Rose Chibambo Speaks (Logos – Open Culture, 2019) and her articles have been published in the Journal of Humanities, and by Mzuni Press and Africa World Press. She is currently researching depictions of pan-Africanism in Francophone music in Africa