The wounded hippo
In a US confronting its own anti-black racism, sentimental imaginings of Africa do little but uphold the white savior industrial complex.
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Kathryn Mathers, a socio-cultural anthropologist, is producer of the film "When I say Africa ..."
In a US confronting its own anti-black racism, sentimental imaginings of Africa do little but uphold the white savior industrial complex.
On The New York Times’ tone-deaf photo-essays of a group of Nigerian women who managed to escape Boko Haram.
Why does being in on the joke not slow down the desire to save Africans?
Americans need recognize if they want to do good in Africa they need to partner with Africans or work in the US on policies that impact negatively Africans.
What can the photographs of American anthropologist Danny Hoffman tell us about Sierra Leone and Liberian mineworkers or about mining in West Africa?
Oprah, like Kristof, turns a personal desire to help sufferers of abuse into a more than acceptable African development program.
Who are the Kenyans who needed a soap opera as an impetus to change their attitudes about political violence and why did they need it?
When ‘culture’ looks like poverty and poverty ‘looks like culture’ any questions about the structural and geopolitical causes of poverty are easily muted.