
The monologue of her silence
The Senegalese director, Khady Sylla, made films out of the impossible and the untranslatable.
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Fatima B. Derby is a Ghanaian feminist writer and queer activist.

The Senegalese director, Khady Sylla, made films out of the impossible and the untranslatable.

We have no illusions about Sandler having a responsibility to create smart cinema.

African refugees walk to Jerusalem in mass protest against indefinite detention by the Israeli state.

“Brazilian” is not a race and life in Brazil is still black and white. Black people hardly benefit from Brazilian-ness.

The Johannesburg-based crew challenges the status quo in South Africa with dance.

History professsor Laura Mitchell developed this interactive map for her students for a map quiz and for the rest of us dispel the notion that Africa is a country. Go on, do the exercise.

How does one hold on to a deeply rooted sense of self, a cultural identity, and make new paths to adapt and make new forms of home?

The melodic world alive in the work of Somali author Diriye Osman.

Can European film producers narrate African pasts without reducing these to just European historical developments?

We collected a ton of odd (including flat out racist and objectionable) media that circulated on social media and by journalists in the last few days about Mandela’s passing.

Our correspondent, attending the funeral of Nelson Mandela, the founder of post-apartheid South Africa, reflects on Madiba’s legacy for his own children.

Martin Scorsese digitally restores Djibril Diop Mambéty’s masterpiece Touki Bouki.

A Kenyan film asks in order to evolve, what part of ourselves do we keep and what part do we leave behind.

The mainstream view is that the Netherlands was a staunch supporter of South Africa’s liberation movement? The story is a bit more complicated.

It is not hard to understand the iconic status of Nelson Mandela and the overflow of emotion his death has provoked in the Pan-African world.

For some of us, the official celebrations are missing a crucial element: Celebrating Nelson Mandela as a figure of armed struggle and the liberation movement.

A playlist of jazz tunes dedicated to South Africa’s first democratically elected president, Nelson Mandela.