
The Ship of Oblivion
Weekend Break Number 52 feature, among others, Buika, TV On The Radio, Alex Lomani, Ill Skillz, Tamikrest and Stromae.
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Golda Gatsey is a freelance writer and customer relationship manager.

Weekend Break Number 52 feature, among others, Buika, TV On The Radio, Alex Lomani, Ill Skillz, Tamikrest and Stromae.

The subjects, who were mostly black and Indian, were photographed around Durban by Singarum Jeevaruthnam Moodley, aka Kitty (1922-1987).

Jean Suret-Canale changed the face of African history for African activists, students and intellectuals.

The contradictions and tensions in pop legend Michael Jackson’s relationship with the African continent.

“We’ve got Ferraris in Africa. What they gon’ say now?”, says one of the young people in a new video. Is that the ethics of South Africa’s young?

“Top Gear” presents Africa as background to white, English gentlemanly machismo.


Bob Hewitt migrated from Australia to apartheid South Africa. There he became a champion in white tennis. He is also accused of abusing children whose families trusted him as their tennis coach.

The theater, built by the military and finished in time for FESTAC in 1977, has always been a site of public disagreement.

The Thai-born artist, Pratchaya Phinthong, mines Zambia’s colonial history to explore how historical narratives are performed through objects.

There is a time for everything: Between Afropunk and the passing of a musical legend, Sathima Bea Benjamin, is our Weekend Music Break.

A government proposal to outlaw violence by parents against their children exposes how widely acceptable the practice is in South Africa.

The words and images found in the Chronic have a tendency to defy simple consumption.

A group of artists attempt to democratized the image of the country’s past through ripping clips off Youtube to re-author what South Africans once knew.

A group of graduate students in New York photograph the city’s immigrant and refugee communities, especially the African ones.

The first of our weekly posts on football’s goings-on, focusing on the politics of money, identity, and the power struggles shaping the game.

Ethiopian photographer Michael Tsegaye doesn’t want to be pigeonholed. Neither does he want his country to be. So his art actively works against that.

Alex Lomani is part of the Congolese diaspora, who has lived in the US, the DRC and South Africa. He has just released “Mélancolie Joyeuse,” a free EP on Bandcamp of four songs that each speak to his personal experience over the past couple of years.