
Imagining new stories, new freedoms, and new joys
Lindsey Green-Simms’ book “Queer African Cinemas” explores the intersections of postcolonial thought, queer theory, and screen media.
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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.

Lindsey Green-Simms’ book “Queer African Cinemas” explores the intersections of postcolonial thought, queer theory, and screen media.

On this week’s AIAC podcast: After an upswing before the pandemic, the global climate justice movement currently looks stuck. What kind of climate politics can appeal to the majority of people?

The wives of (former) heads of state form an important part of the political elite in Guinea, considerably shaping the country’s sociopolitical and economic past and present.

The profound influence, often underplayed, that great African revolutionary Amílcar Cabral had on Brazilian educator and philosopher Paulo Freire.

The greatest achievement of Ghanaian philosopher Kwasi Wiredu was to recast African knowledge from something lost to something gained.

How Africa’s pension funds risk becoming instruments of Africa’s neoliberal takeover.

We do not have to die, become sick or leave the academy to live and be in this space.

A photo essay on Masjid Tajul Huda, a mostly West African mosque in the Bronx, New York.

‘We Slaves of Suriname’ (1934) was the first study of Dutch colonial rule from the perspectives of the people who resisted it. It is has been published in English for the first time.

As coal is dying we must be prepared to absorb the transferable infrastructure of this industry and re-tool it for use in the emerging economy.

A new film, “Sing Freetown” (director: Clive Patterson) and accompanying theater project from Sorious Samura and Charlie Haffner attempt, with varying success, to sing a different song of Freetown.

Why South Africa needs to democratize its labor movement.

On this week’s AIAC Podcast: A decade after the Arab Spring, Egypt faces troubled times. Could we see another uprising?

Somalis have enough to worry about. The last thing they need is more war, especially one sponsored by the United States’ War on Terror.

The Dorpa Band from Port Sudan, a city on the Red Sea coast in eastern Sudan, embodies Beja Culture. Their bandleader, writes what drives their music.

The desire to be absorbed into and consumed by the West, to find solace in its seductive promises, animates Robin Dimet’s film, “Sami’s Odysseys.”

Activist Blondin Diop and artist Samb are exemplars of Senegal’s post-independence promise and crisis, marked by the global uprisings of May 1968. Mustapha Saha was a friend to both of them.

May 21 marks the anniversary of the writer and commentator Binyavanga Wainaina’s untimely death in 2019. He was 48.

On this month’s AIAC Radio, Boima celebrates all things basketball, looking at its historical relationships with music and race, then focusing on Africa’s biggest names in the sport.

If generations of African youth are to prosper post-pandemic, a fundamental and vital shift in educational context and content is needed.