The violence within us
Police violence, racism and the connections between Minneapolis in the United States and Cape Town, South Africa.
Police violence, racism and the connections between Minneapolis in the United States and Cape Town, South Africa.
Media scholar Cara Moyer-Duncan wrote a book about postapartheid South Africa. Here she gives her book picks for our #ReadingList series.
What exactly did South Africa’s government do with the time they gained through the two-month COVID-19 lockdown, except to brutalize its people?
Why are South Africans not in the streets against police brutality like Americans are? It has less to do with the internet or middle classes. South Africans are captured by punitive logics. Break that.
What happened to the once universally accepted idea of healthcare for all?
Police violence and the murder of black people in the United States have provoked outrage and protest around the world, including on the continent. But, why is there so little outrage over police violence in African countries?
How do white South African writers confront the country's as well as their own pasts?
Why courts should not become a country’s sole moral arbiter, how the coronavirus impacted judicial processes in India and South Africa, and more.
How did South Africa’s white working class—those close to the politicized black workforce—experience the reform of apartheid?
In South Africa, we are not in a situation where we need to choose between saving lives and protecting livelihoods. It is far worse. We are in danger of losing both.
COVID-19 exposes the continued inability of most white South Africans to critically reflect on privilege or engage constructively about the handling of the pandemic.
There’s a certain humanity in the work of late South African photographer Santu Mofokeng in how he approached his subjects and the politics of representation.
The revival of an elite technocratic rationality is starting to undo South Africa's lockdown, now in its second month.
Rehad Desai's film celebrates the investigative journalists who expose the corruption of Zuma's regime in South Africa, comes with a depressing note: To date, no one has gone to jail.
What can we learn from the 256 hours of audio recordings of the 1964 Rivonia Trial's proceedings?
Queen Sono may be Netflix’s most popular series, but it may not be the right home for the new wave of African film and television.
The Hub of Loving Action in Africa (HOLAA), promotes conversations about African experiences with sex and sexuality.
The South African government's COVID-19 "rescue plan" is an opportunity to rethink its economic model, if it can break with market orthodoxy.
From exile, bassist and composer, Johnny Mbizo Dyani (1945-1986), explored and promoted the folk music traditions of South Africa.
South Africa's R50bn ($26bn) rescue package is 10% of its GDP. It is a major step forward, but some warning lights are flashing.