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Index
Chairman
of Fools
Shimmer Chinodya
2005: 210 x 134 mm
ISBN 1 77922 041 3
Reviewer:
Karoline Kemp
Set in Zimbabwe, Chinodya's Chairman of Fools tells the story
of a successful academic and writer returning home after an overseas teaching
position. Returning to find his family changed, but his culture and traditions
the same, Farai Chari slips into a dark and frightening paranoia.
Reality and hallucinations intertwine for Farai, and Chinodya does an
excellent job of weaving the two together. At the same time, the book
raises important social issues, questioning the relationships between
men and women, the expectations placed on men, how people with mental
illnesses are treated and the changes Zimbabwe is going through, Chairman
of Fools presents an interesting story. Farai represents middle class
male chauvinism, and that his story is one of unhappiness and illness
makes for a narrative that is curious. Upon his immediate return Farai
finds that his wife has become more and more involved in her church, and
his children are distant. His professional success has made him materially
comfortable, but hasn’t made him happy, and indeed, has trapped
him into a life that he must work to continue sustaining. Tradition also
binds him to his wife ˆ his family and community would never allow
for him to leave. His drinking problem, combined with his wife's newfound
religious zeal, make for a strain in their relationship, and even the
intervention of numerous family members has little impact.
Farai slips deeper and deeper into a scene that includes alcohol and prostitutes,
and finally spins out of control with a car accident. This is the beginning
of his paranoia, which eventually lands him in a mental institution –
everything Farai has gone through, and his alcoholic reaction, have aggravated
a mental illness – he suffers from bipolar disorder. Suffering from
mood exaggerated mood swings – mania and depression, Farai can no
longer hide the fact that he is at times delusional. At the mental institution
he meets a number of colourful patients, each battling their own afflictions.
He is crowned Chairman of Fools, by them, and is put in charge
of their complaints regarding the day to day running of the mental ward.
But he is also introduced to people so different from himself, and from
this, learns some important lessons.
The book ends quietly. Life slowly, simply returns to normal, with no
big changes. Balancing out his illness with medication, he is deemed well
enough to return to the US to teach. Farai and his wife reconcile softly,
each admitting their shortfalls. While Farai wants his wife to be someone,
something else to him, she will never be this woman who he can be freely
himself with. Life continues – it doesn’t get better, or worse.
Farai simply gets used to it.
While clearly representing an upper-middle class socio-economic status,
Chinodya's character is one that men in general can relate to. Masculinities
in Zimbabwe, and indeed, around the globe, are such that men are often
put into positions of expected power, success and responsibility. Should
they not meet these expectations, their masculinity can be called into
question, affecting not only their own identity and self-esteem, but the
ways in which they relate to their families and communities. Chairman
of Fools is a dark, and at times depressing representation of the
despair that can consume, but also demonstrates the very real effects
of the pressure often put on male heads of family.
© The author/publisher
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