
The Namibian debate on German reparations
There are Namibians, including Black Namibians, who resist fully addressing the genocide.

There are Namibians, including Black Namibians, who resist fully addressing the genocide.

What personal and collective memory is evoked when we encounter films from a historical period?

Andimba Toivo ya Toivo, who died at 92 on 9 June 2017, was one of the founders of Namibia's modern liberation movement that led the fight for political independence.

For the Star Boys, a West-African performance collective based in Antwerp, Belgium, the dream of playing professional football in Europe found its revival in theatre.

The playwright Mfoniso Udofia is trying to debunk the “typical” understanding of Africa, and specifically Nigeria, in her work.

My photographic work is and always has been deeply personal to me. The majority of my childhood was spent in Tanzania, Kenya, Zambia, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. I grew to be comfortable with being marked as different, whether in Lusaka or in Washington D.C., and found hip hop as a point of common ground, as a way […]

Why is Liberia’s Government rushing to sell its public schools to for-profits from the United States?

You are bound to be inundated by all manner of readings of “Isoken,” Jadesola Osiberu’s new Nollywood rom-com, the majority of them feminist. Those readings will recapitulate society’s pressure on single women. They will critique the near-universal acceptance in Africa of marriage as the crowning achievement of a woman. They will point out subtle and blatant patriarchies. They might miss the inexplicable, self-inflicted assumption […]

South African students have confronted us with a range of political, economic and intellectual questions to be answered – not merely posed a problem that needs to be managed.

The vivid cinematography of "Waithira," a film about Kenya, aside, the author would have preferred more knots to be tied and a little less untethering.

We consider ourselves an indispensable and integral part of its national life, because it is our home, writes a Zimbabwean scholar.

By volume, the most significant body of writing on Biafra is neither history nor fiction, but memoir.