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Chapter 5 focuses on the best-known Caribbean administrator, Félix Eboué of French Guiana. Now enshrined in the Panthéon in Paris for his role in the 1940 ralliement of French Equatorial Africa, Eboué also spent two decades in Oubangui-Chari and was a prolific ethnographer. This chapter draws on his 1918 dictionary and notebooks of Banda folktales to uncover his relationships with interpreters, colonial-appointed chiefs, and others. The chapter also charts Eboué’s development of a “géographie cordiale” with Fily Dabo Sissoko of Soudan Français as he moved back and forth across the Atlantic in the later stages of his career. The final section considers how, after Eboué’s death, his ethnographic fictions transformed him into a Pan-African symbol.

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