
Mother in law
In the film, “Maman Colonelle,” a Congolese policewoman takes on ghosts of the past.
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Golda Gatsey is a freelance writer and customer relationship manager.

In the film, “Maman Colonelle,” a Congolese policewoman takes on ghosts of the past.


The systemic challenges faced by black South Africans in even getting onto the field to play cricket in the first place.

The stories of the Afro-Italian, African-American, and Afro-Caribbean actors and crews who helped shape Italy’s film industry.

The originator of dub poetry talks about the role of culture in politics, antiracist and class struggle in the UK.


The author, in exile from Eritrea, attempts construct a profile of the country’s longtime leader.



The decision to relocate Civil Rights activist Rosa Parks’s home from Detroit to Berlin, Germany, is another case of white savior complex.

The film depicts the mutually transformative friendship of three “ethnically different” Nigerian young men in break with their elders’ attitudes.

Neither western or African media nor academic literature can afford to continue to erase or marginalize Anglophone Cameroon from the region’s present and history.


The re-emergence of racialized modes of thinking, racism and discrimination across the West, makes reading and re-reading Stuart Hall urgent.


The 24th edition of the New York African Film Festival put Senegal in the spotlight, featuring five short films from there.

The rise and fall of television satire reflects the tragedy and disillusionment of the post-Morsi era.


The real danger of an Emmanuel Macron victory is that, simply by virtue of not being Marine Le Pen, his policies will be treated as reasonable.

The story of Algeria’s brilliant, and heroic, footballers who played for independence.