A cinema for (some of) the people
South African film production house kykNET's dominance skews storytelling on the country's screens.
South African film production house kykNET's dominance skews storytelling on the country's screens.
Davis, who died at 84 on October 15th, was a prominent leader of the anti-apartheid movement in the US and an analytical thinker and visionary.
While Sisulu's political career is less celebrated than Nelson Mandela, it was as remarkable.
The world is out of joint and Immanuel Wallerstein, one of its great public intellectuals, has left us—albeit with tools to battle the dying kicks of capitalism.
Reflecting on white joy, black celebration, and the meaning of the Springbok win at the 2019 Rugby World Cup.
We should not let the achievements of a multiracial Springbok rugby team, led by its first black captain, be commodified and commercialized in the service of neoliberalism.
The late Springbok rugby wing's legacy needs to be sustained, and the hope that he represented is perhaps more critical than ever.
It's going take a fully democratic anti-capitalist movement to fight climate change. The case of South Africa shows how long we have to go.
A reflection—by one of the group’s artists—on a Swiss-South African art project exploring eviction and extraction.
The statistics and scenes of violence against black immigrants in South Africa are horrible. A young Cameroonian student in South Africa writes about what it is like to live under such insecurity.
Bush Radio, "The Mother of Community Radio in Africa," is in financial trouble. Give them all your money.
Black Women’s poetry has been largely ignored or denigrated in the world of South African letters. They have to do it on their own.
The compromises and conciliations of South African rugby mirror the unfinished transition from apartheid racism in the broader society.
C.L.R. James' book about the Haitian Revolution, had an impact far beyond the Caribbean.
What does the divergent fates of Springbok Eben Etzebeth and former coach Peter de Villiers say about the state of South African rugby?
It's easier to find African restaurants in New York City than it is in Cape Town, and culinary schools on the continent aren't helping.
Williams, the only black South African player in the 1995 Rugby World Cup, was a complex figure in complex times. He deserves to be remembered as such.
Outrage against arrogant hunters is not enough. Wildlife conservation requires rethinking.
Can policing deliver justice in South Africa? The short answer to that question has been, decidedly, no.
Live TV broadcasts of political rallies, funerals and press conferences, may be more decisive than social media in shaping mass debate in South Africa.