
Kenyan Neorealism
Nairobi Half Life is a smart, take-no-prisoners action movie that makes us to wrestle with the neoliberal city.
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Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.
Nairobi Half Life is a smart, take-no-prisoners action movie that makes us to wrestle with the neoliberal city.
For all its cinema glitz, Cannes is in a part of France associated with the far right and very anti-immigrant, so it is a treat to see the region is hosting an African themed film festival.
Chinua Achebe’s legacy is not fixed but rather about responding to change with energy and wit.
Zimbabwean photographer, Nancy Mteki: “If we don’t stand up for ourselves, no one else is going to do it.”
The story of Happy Sindane, the lost white boy, who put a lie to South Africa’s rainbow shibboleths.
For our series interviewing the new generation of African creatives, we sent questions to designer. Olalekan Jeyifous. We asked him for his five favorite designs.
Why when African leaders meet Barack Obama, they are received in groups (unlike all other heads of state) and rarely get to speak?
The French news magazine, Courrier International, did a special issue: “Afrique 3.0.” We had a closer look. Is it any good?
What has Steve Bantu Biko got to do with partying and spring in the Netherlands?
A short film of electronic based music across the Sahel region: Mauritania to Northern Nigeria and in-between.
Apart from a heavy Senegalese presence, this Music Break, No.37, includes some other favorites of this site: Petite Noire, Laura Mvula, Rachid Taha and newcomer, Napoleon Da Legend.
A conversation with South African artist Masello Motana on pop stars, politicians and personhood.
The trouble with the official Dutch commemoration of the abolition of slavery. It leaves out the descendants of victims altogether.
An interview with Soraya Morayef, who is documenting the graffiti scene in Cairo, Beirut, Libya and Palestine.