
How to curate a pandemic
Three prominent curators on how they are (re-)situating their respective curatorial practices in relation to the political moment.
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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.

Three prominent curators on how they are (re-)situating their respective curatorial practices in relation to the political moment.

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How Rwandan history is told—and who does the telling—is important as it determines who is able to participate in conversations about the past.

Francophonie has served to obscure the harms caused by neocolonial projects in Africa, projects that are themselves a reflection of the racism within France’s borders.

The anniversary of Marikana just passed us. Media coverage of the massacre is an important part of its legacy.

Reflections on Malawi’s recent election rerun, false starts and the hope that public representatives in Africa become accountable to their electorates’ aspirations.

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In this, the first of a series of posts, we critically look at the implications of climate policy in the most powerful Western country for Africans.

Official Ghanaian pan-Africanism is now less motivated by African liberation and solidarity and more by profit incentives. Ghana’s Year of Return is the best example of this.

This week on our livestream show, we focus on the legacy of Kwame Nkrumah. Stream it live Tuesdays on Youtube, Facebook, Twitter. Subscribe to our Patreon for the podcast archive.

How climate change is threatening lives in Kenya.

The Eritrean government continues to force students into military service in the middle of a pandemic. Things are about to get even worse.

White South Africans rarely look in the proverbial mirror to reflect on where they come from and how those histories shape their current realities.

When our political parties only have recourse to the realm of identity and culture, it is a smokescreen for their lack of political legitimacy and programmatic content. It is cynically unpolitical, and it’s all bullshit.

Senegalese writer Mbougar Sarr on how we are actually informed about symbols we want to bring down, and about those we wish to commemorate.

Africa Is a Country is proud to announce the official launch of the AIAC Talk livestream show.

The imminent and existential danger to Ethiopia is not Abiy Ahmed and an oppressive government. It is violent ethno-nationalism.

Amilcar Cabral remains inspirational for Africans and non-Africans challenged by injustice and oppression.

News reports claiming that “wet markets” in Asia are the source of the coronavirus obscure the fact that the consumption of wild animals is common in the West.

The Liverpool striker, Sadio Mane, carries the values of his boyhood home, Bambali, with him. But his football is a product of the European professional game.