The Sandhurst-trained military dictator whose growing paranoia and desire for lifelong presidency alienate him from his peers.
The narrative centers on three childhood friends who, following a military coup, find themselves at the peak of national influence: Anthills of the Savannah
The Weight of History: Power and Resistance in "Anthills of the Savannah" Set in the fictional West African nation of
The radical, Western-educated editor of the national newspaper, whose scathing editorials against the government eventually lead to his state-sanctioned assassination. Key Themes following a military coup
Chinua Achebe’s final novel, Anthills of the Savannah (1987), stands as a definitive critique of the postcolonial African state. Set in the fictional West African nation of Kangan—a thinly veiled stand-in for Nigeria—the novel explores the tragic dissolution of friendship and the corrosive nature of absolute power. A Tragic Triumvirate
The Commissioner for Information, who attempts to navigate the regime's moral decay from within until he is forced into open resistance.
The novel moves beyond a simple story of dictatorship to examine deeper sociopolitical fractures: