
6391 Article(s) by:
Golda Gatsey
Golda Gatsey is a freelance writer and customer relationship manager.


The Books of 2014
Slave Biographies

Decolonising white Berlin

I’m so happy in Cape Town
In South Africa’s second city, poverty as well as other forms of inequality, are the direct consequence of elite and middle class wealth.

The Kiswahili Prize for African Literature
Can an African language literature prize be inherently Pan-African?

5 Questions for a Filmmaker: Philippe Lacôte
The Ivorian filmmaker wished he had made Akira Kurosawa’s Dreams, based on the filmmaker’s own dreams, when the fantastical infiltrates the real.

Why we can’t breathe
The last few years have revealed that, particularly at the state level, justice for Black Americans is an impossibility.

The Invisible Children Highlight Reel
Nine conclusions we can draw from the hype machine that was the viral advocacy campaign, Kony 2012. One of them was that ordinary Ugandans saw right through it.

Feel the Rainbow
Designer Akosua Afriye-Kumi: “A lot of designers take or find inspiration from Africa, I want to do the same but actually be in Africa doing it.”

A New Kind of Romance
Nigerian publisher: it is time the continent’s consumer class gets romance lit that is entertaining and reflect the complexity of their lives.

Explaining Racism to a White South African Liberal
Highlighting spectacular incidents of racial violence is that they overshadow the daily, unrecorded anti-black racist acts.

Pure Bacardi house fun
Hipsters Don’t Dance Top World Carnival Tunes for November 2014.
Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade Database

Black death and revolution

#ICANTBREATHE

The Fate of la Francophonie
Do we still need an organization of France’s former colonies? Whose interests does it actually serve?

5 Questions for a Filmmaker: Kivu Ruhorahoza
Ruhorahoza wished he made “Sans Soleil” by Chris Marker: “The film is a good example of the work of a filmmaker who has reached maturity and an artist who is truly free.”

The Gambia Gambit
There is a long-standing Norwegian tradition of externalizing racism, so that anti-black racism is always and inevitably located elsewhere.
