
The narrative of African women
An exhibit attempts to reframe popular perceptions and the image of African women in the United States.

An exhibit attempts to reframe popular perceptions and the image of African women in the United States.

Solange and two other US artists want to solve the problem of access to water in Africa by teaming up with Coco Cola. That sounds like a contradiction.
Although it was only launched a year ago, Cape Town-based Badilisha Poetry Radio is rapidly building
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jEe96sQsRg4&hd=1 You know we like the Dutch magazine ZAM. The promised English edition is (almost) here.

A mix of factors - language, regional, sexism, an opposition that has been co-opted by the ruling party and repression - prevents real, meaningful change in Cameroon.

This is brilliant. The BBC, working with the Royal Geographical Society, has posted an audio slideshow

Few intellectuals have changed the world in such practical ways.

Negar Azimi, in Frieze Magazine, on what the ascendency of ‘political art’ means for art’s actual

A profile of Jansen, vice chancellor of Free State University, on a leading online media outlet in South Africa, says more about the problem with liberalism in South Africa.
http://youtu.be/Wd6NxkKCVI8 I am not cool like Theophelius London. I don’t wear nice, patterned shirts. Solange Knowles*

Rob Boffard writing in The Guardian: Hip-hop in South Africa faces the same problems all music
I received my copy of this year’s Commonwealth Prize winner Aminatta Forna’s The Memory of Love in