
6436 Article(s) by:
Paul Milchick
Paul Milchik is a pseudonym for the author of this piece. His name has been changed due to his status as an international student in the US during the second Trump administration, in a context where foreign students have been targeted for detention and deportation as a result of expressing pro-Palestinian views.


Malawian Twitter is not a gentle place
By far the best place to follow Malawian news and politics is social media app, Twitter. It can be relied upon to be the very first place where Malawi’s breaking news gets to the rest of us.

The world’s media and Angola’s elections
The oppression/resistance model of politics explains some things, but it does not explain everything, and less and less these days on the continent.
Friday Bonus Music Break, N°18
Big Frizzle’s ‘Africa’

The trouble with South Africa’s middle class
In South Africa, there was more activity in solidarity with Pussy Riot than with the Marikana miners killed by police in August 2012.
10 African films to watch out for, N°2

A certain Israeli psyche
Israel’s Interior Minister, Eli Yishai basically says Israel was a white country in a debate about African immigrants and refugees.

The Dutch ‘King of Africa’
In Dutch politics, Africa mostly works as a tactic to embarrass and ridicule your opponent.

The fear of being a terrible writer
A South African writer gets invited to the Farafina Creative Writing Workshop in Lagos, Nigeria. Her main takeaway: writing is an act of faith; an ancient form of prayer.

My favorite photographs N°5: Abraham Oghobase
Friday Bonus Music Break, N°17
Zanele Muholi’s “Mo(u)rning” | Exhibition

Ghanaian film posters and viewing cultures
The posters are tied to the Ghanaian and Nollywood film industries that emerged in the late 1980s.
10 African films to watch out for

The Vershtunkende Toronto Zoo
‘Vershtunkende’ is a Yiddish adjective loosely translated as ‘darned,’ ‘exasperating’, ‘maliciously idiotic’. It is not a nice word to use for either a person or thing.

My favorite photographs N°4: Nana Kofi Acquah

Paulo Flores’s Ex-Combatentes
The Angolan singer’s new album deals with war in the widest sense: war with the self, war with family, neighbors, friends.

This sea shall be uprooted
Makoko, in Lagos, with over 100, 000 residents, is viewed as a shantytown. There’s more to it. This is the destruction of a community.

The most interesting bits
Kaleidoscope magazine has done an “Africa” issue; it wants to walk a fine line between identity politics and universalism.