
What if black people inverted South Africa’s township tours?
Two black Capetonians went to rich Camps Bay and filmed white people going on about their lives.
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Golda Gatsey is a freelance writer and customer relationship manager.

Two black Capetonians went to rich Camps Bay and filmed white people going on about their lives.

What Egypt’s latest football tragedy says about social divisions in the country.

Essuman believes that confining any storyteller to labels like “African stories” is a disservice to the story and the one telling it.

In sharp contrast to the coverage of Syrian refugees, Western media barely register the escalating Eritrean refugee crisis.

The renaming of a popular Cape Town road after Apartheid’s last president, FW de Klerk, opens the debate about memorials in postapartheid South Africa.

Though Hall’s work was written from the vantage point of the black immigrant experience in the UK, some of it resonated in South Africa.

There is an established tradition in Economics of talking about Africa from afar, western scholars leading the discussion.

Nigerians have fought for democracy before, and we shouldn’t underestimate civil society’s willingness to defend it.


Malian director Abderrahmane Sissako’s film “Timbuktu” complicates the Jihadist narrative in Africa.

Why are the Grammys so clueless about what is contemporary Latin pop music? They keep handing out awards to veterans like Ruben Blades or Vicente Fernández.


The Nairobi-based filmmaker and musician aims to bring stories, pictures and sound together to create something immutable on the screen.

A new film about how Mozambican youth express and negotiate the country’s post-socialist modernity through dance.

The horrible tale of football star Joe Gaetjens’s football triumphs, his torture and disappearance by Haiti’s US’s supported dictatorship.

John Coltrane was a prophet of global black power who musically and metaphorically broke down barriers constraining the lives and imaginations of black people worldwide.

…or the constant deferral of reconciliation

The US is re-upping its failed “war on drugs” in Central America. The spin is they will fight “violence and poverty.” This won’t end well.

Teca, how we call our own Latin American jukebox, plans to bring you the newest, most interesting artists from the region.