Man of action
An interview with Brian Peterson, author of a new biography of Thomas Sankara. Peterson positions 1980s Burkina Faso as counterhegemonic to the neoliberal transition then.
An interview with Brian Peterson, author of a new biography of Thomas Sankara. Peterson positions 1980s Burkina Faso as counterhegemonic to the neoliberal transition then.
The film "Finding Sally" grapples with Ethiopia's past, but may romanticize its present.
What kinds of radical emancipatory futures are being imagined in Africa’s speculative fictions?
A new film by South African director Nomawonga Khumalo represents the contradictions and nuances of black women’s interior lives.
A novel and Netflix film about Spanish colonialism in Equatorial Guinea raises questions about appropriation and storytelling.
Adidas and other private, for-profit companies that are embracing corporate queerness are never going to contribute to our liberation.
Scholars Archie Mafeje and Cedric Robinson challenged Eurocentrism. Their ideas are becoming more widely known. They're the focus of AIAC Talk this week.
Tracing the digital contours of the settler colony helps us understand how old inequalities will shape a future with artificial intelligence.
This month on AIAC Radio we talk with Marissa Moorman and Paulo Flores to see how a music culture born in the quintals of Luanda helped birth a nation. Listen on Worldwide FM.
A new documentary focuses on using the soil’s carbon absorbent properties to solve the climate change problem.
En Tunisie, face au déni persistant de l'identité africaine, la communauté noire ne veut plus attendre.
Tunisia’s denial of its African identity persists today. Black Tunisians are fighting to change that.
On telling stories through the evocative and varied moments in which humans live, rather than through the predictable and artificial plots historians devise.
The system to pay out royalties to musicians in South Africa says a lot about the racial inequalities in the local industry.
Working-class men try unsuccessfully to integrate themselves into new economies in the films of Ousmane Sembene and Mrinal Sen.
If we stop using terms to describe race at all, we risk undermining our struggle to eliminate racism.
2020 has given us an archive of heart-breaking examples of the politically transformative power of care.
Is the future of podcasting a show featuring isiZulu retellings of 19th-century African life combined with an original soundscape composed with a revolutionary ethos?
Enough of the ignorance: LGBT+ rights are Ghanaian and human rights, not an attempt by Westerners to impose their values or culture.