
On researching in and out of Africa
The writer critiques the legacy of Christian missionaries in Africa and making sure her own engagement with Ethiopia doesn’t morph into white saviorism.
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Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.
The writer critiques the legacy of Christian missionaries in Africa and making sure her own engagement with Ethiopia doesn’t morph into white saviorism.
Duane Jethro goes to South African fast food chain, Chicken Licken, to eat a Big John Burger, and finds out the postcolonial feelings it inspires.
Last month the government of South Sudan passed a decree that the national anthem could not be sung not in the presence of the President. What could be behind this decision?
On Mohamed Hamdan Dagolo, known as Hemitti, the man behind the massacres against Sudanese protesters.
A movement of young feminists are fighting back against patriarchy and rape culture in Afropop music in Ghana.
How black South African authors have written about domestic workers. There’s a rich archive there.
African women, both at home and in the diaspora, use beauty, fashion and other aesthetics to simultaneously celebrate, navigate and challenge social and cultural norms.
Agroecology draws on deep knowledge systems to counter the damage of capitalist agribusiness.
An excerpt from a new book published by Wits University Press that explores how domestic workers are depicted in South African historiography and literature.
While protests in the north of Algeria grabs headlines today, protest and dissent in the Algerian Sahara have been going on for decades.
On national anniversaries and democratic survival.
Why do football matches between Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates matter more than any other sporting event in South Africa. Even more than when the rugby Springboks play.
How the African Cup of Nations shows up Arab-African identity and cultural politics on the continent.
The German metal band Rammstein’s video for ‘Auslander’ wants it both ways: a critique of colonialism and sex tourism, but right-wing neo-nazis can also enjoy the fascist iconography.
Poor Nairobi residents pay close to four times more for water that is much less clean, adequate or consistent.
An interview with Somali-American poet Ladan Osman on her work, white supremacy in America, and Adam and Eve.