
Revolutionary political thought in South Sudan
Once upon a time, South Sudanese exiles in Khartoum—inspired by, among others, Charles Dickens and Malcolm X—had a radical vision for their new country.
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Golda Gatsey is a freelance writer and customer relationship manager.

Once upon a time, South Sudanese exiles in Khartoum—inspired by, among others, Charles Dickens and Malcolm X—had a radical vision for their new country.

France no longer has an excuse to hold on to Senegal’s cultural heritage. Senegal has a place for it.

A radical feature on South Africa’s literary calendar, Abantu celebrates black intellectual labor, and resists the tropes that marginalizes it.

Update from Algiers on the protests against President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s plans to run for a fifth term in office.

Race and geopolitics in the 1966 coup d’etat that overthrew Kwame Nkrumah in Ghana.

As Sudanese continue to chant “Just fall, that is all” against the regime, doctors pay a hefty price for standing with them.

When we as Africans tell our own stories, we re-write the stories in the history books that our children are still taught in schools.

Bisi Silva’s constant movement was a form of unlearning; in her awareness of artists and cultural production on the African continent.

Excerpts from a conversation with the British historian, writer and academic Paul Gilroy.

An interview with author Emmanuel Iduma on traveling through twenty African cities.

A documentary film about a black filmmaker and her struggles to make a film about Marike de Klerk.

The reality for Africans living in China’s ‘African City’ contrast greatly with the way their governments and China’s leaders interact.

Poitier is a pioneer in Hollywood (the first black male actor to win an Oscar), but, like in most of his US acting roles, he also played it safe in African roles he took on.

Stand-up comedy, especially black stand-up, and the political in South Africa.

For one, take economic management out of the control of neoliberal technocrats.

The film, “The Burial of Kojo,” sparks a vital conversation about the intersections of heritage, politics, and spirituality in Ghana and in Africa at large.

Rediscovered lectures Walter Rodney gave in 1978 in Hamburg shows a reflective intellectual, thinking critically about postcolonial African governance.

NGOs and freelance journalists are increasingly filling the vacuum being left by a declining Western media presence. It’s not all good.

In a heteronormative society like Nigeria, men are entitled to sex with any and all women.

In January 2019, a group of Zambian farmers brought their fight for justice to the UK Supreme Court, in a case with far-reaching implications for multinational companies.