The Restaurant Manager

If you missed this: Lilian Thuram, the former footballer who won a World Cup medal with France in 1998 and sometimes philosopher, was in Brussels last week to promote his anti-racism campaign. While having lunch at a restaurant, the staff there told him that the toilets were “reserved for clients.” The manager David Martin is quoted as saying it is all a “misunderstanding,” and “… we didn’t know he was a client and I admit I didn’t recognise him. There was no wilful discrimination.”

Martin has offered his apologies: “I also told him I would love to cook for him. But (Thuram) didn’t want to stay. I really regret I am being accused of racism. I grew up among Algerians in this neigborhood and I have two blacks and a Morrocan guy working in my kitchen.”

Source.

More here and here.

5 Questions for Pole Pole Press

Earlier this year, I interviewed Fouad Asfour of the Johannesburg-based Pole Pole Press, about the press’ first publication, Emzana Shack Recollections, by Lungile Sojini, and what he learned as he dipped into the world of publishing and distributing books. At “close to 100 pages in 12 pt Times New Roman on A4, single spacing,” it was “not exactly a short story,” but something about its “peculiar style” got a hold of Asfour. He wanted readers to encounter the writing as is, rather than have it shaped by teams of editors. What followed was an entertaining email conversation about his “experiment” to “show that it’s possible to make publishing more broadly available”; the “dictatorship” of paper production companies that “molest” people “with the whiteness of [their] oh so clean bonded paper, ignoring requests for recycled or unbleached paper”; and why the low readership in South Africa is more attributable to the fact that the “current book market clearly does not produce for the large audience…but for a small, mainly white middle class” in the country.

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‘The Ballad of the Black Gold’

Keeping with the oil theme, here’s Talib Kweli, featuring his frequent collaborator Hi-Tek and Imani Uzuri, from June 2010.

“We can handle the truth. Can you handle the shame?”

I interviewed my colleague at SUNY-Oswego, Faith Maina, just as the story broke about Britain’s involvement in human rights atrocities in Kenya. Faith was only born after Kenya attained independence; but her father—a teacher—was detained twice during the Mau Mau uprising; afterwards, he could only get a job as a “boy” in the city. Her family also lost their lands, in retaliation for a suspected murder of a “white man or a chief [who was friendly to the British].” I asked her to comment on the significance of the trials and the case brought by four Kenyans against the British Foreign Office, for her and her family.

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OIL

While I was in Toronto with Sean and Tsitsi Jaji for the Canadian Association of African Studies (CAAS) conference, I checked out Edward Burtynsky’s “Oil” at the Royal Ontario Museum Institute for Contemporary Culture (exhibition runs April 9 to July 2, 2011, and getting into the museum is pricy – $25 per person). The three-year touring exhibition is organized by the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, and features Burtynsky’s decade-long exploration of the effluvia of our love-affair with oil—from extraction to production to consumption. Included are images of herds of “nodding donkeys” (the pumpjacks used to extract oil), rows and rows of immaculate, identical automobiles in sales lots, meditations on the beauty of clover-leaved, many stranded expressways of LA and Shanghai, and the  beckoning neon fingers of Exxon, Shell, and fast-food drive-throughs in the hinterlands of America. There are also abandoned oil fields owned by the State Oil Company of the Republic of Azerbaijan (SOCAR), mountains of dead tyres, and the Miro-like patterning in the oil sands in Fort McMurray, Alberta. An image of a body of water in Northern Alberta (here and here) which has the second-largest known deposit of oil in the world after Saudi Arabia, contains a mesmerising sky of rolling grey clouds mirrored in what appears to be perfectly still water—but is in actuality a toxic pond. In the large scale of these photographs, we realise how small the presence of humanity is—if it is there at all. In Burtynsky’s images of shipbreaking in Chittagong, Bangladesh (above), clinging to the looming hulls, somewhere in the dirty reds, rust, mud, and chemicals, are the bodies of the men engaged in the process of dismantling these giants: hardly noticeable, but made visible because he has carefully enlarged the image to a scale that removes our unknowing and disinterest.

Burtynsky calls his images “the new reflecting pools” of our times. Next to his, George Osodi’s “Oil Rich Niger Delta,” images are different beasts. The crudeness and cruelty of toxic lives, enmeshed within the grand profiteering and politics of oil extraction in the poorest regions of the world are in the forefront here. Significantly, Osodi is able to avoid pity and guilt. Though his images do not have the finesse of Burtynsky’s, they are more intimate, and more immediately “lively” and living (see them here  and here).

–Neelika Jayawardane.

‘Native Sun,’ The Film

Blitz the Ambassador released his short film to accompany his album Native Sun which was released two weeks ago.–Boima Tucker.

Give me the beat

The video for “Banikidi”, the new single from Nigerian Darey‘s new album Double Dare. That’s our Music Break.

Via What’s Up Africa.

Locust Couture

Review: Alexander McQueen: Savage Beauty at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

In that rarefied, and manufactured world that surrounded Alexander McQueen during his terribly short life, he was careful to cultivate his intellectual yearnings, as well as his creative ambitions. In “Savage Beauty,” we can see that McQueen had more to work with than the average designer’s pea’s worth of a brain, his brilliant intellect embellishing the sculpted work more than all the blood-red beadwork, gold thread, and metallic sequins in the world. For McQueen, design aesthetics and fashion were deeply imbedded within the political and the historical (and vice versa), a vision that allowed him to see “beyond clothing’s physical constraints to its ideational and ideological possibilities”.

When he regarded the ‘African’ as many designers do, McQueen invoked the Romantic to exoticise and frame the African as ‘primitive’ in the same old problematic manner: “What I do is look at the ancient African tribes, and the way they dress. The rituals of how they dress…there’s a lot of tribalism in the collections.” In It’s a Jungle Out There (autumn/winter 1997–98), which was “inspired by the Thomson’s gazelle” (“the poor critter” at the bottom of Africa’s food chain) there’s a lot of brown skin, gazelle horns, and miniature crocodile and vulture skulls. We are assured that “all were by-products”—the animals were killed for meat, and not solely for their skin or fur.

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‘Mom, what’s for supper? In Mandarin’

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHuhqcvsPiU

Six years ago there were 12 Chinese-language immersion programs at U.S. schools for children in grades 12 and below; this year that figure is closer to 50. Back on the continent, CNN did a feature of elementary school in South Africa’s capital learning Mandarin. We never get a sense from the report how widespread the teaching of Mandarin is in South African schools, but, I bet some observers will see this as part of China’s Africa strategy.

How much do the Burkinabe artisans get?

Produced in a limited edition [and costing $1,720.00], with each piece unique, the ‘Muse Two Artisanal Recycled’ bag marries the savoir-faire of Yves Saint Laurent leather goods with the artisanal handiwork of women from Burkina Faso.

H/T: Matt Kirwin