
The impossibility of the black intellectual
Stuart Hall, the British-Jamaican cultural theorist, would have been open to and pragmatic about the ideas of the younger generations of anti-racists now in the making.
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Golda Gatsey is a freelance writer and customer relationship manager.

Stuart Hall, the British-Jamaican cultural theorist, would have been open to and pragmatic about the ideas of the younger generations of anti-racists now in the making.

Former South African President Jacob Zuma’s various rationalizations and obstructions for his crimes make for good drama. But they also reveal Zuma’s aversion to the rule of law.

The vagueness around who is and isn’t a “tribe of Kenya” is a double-edged sword. The persistence of ethnic classification and counting can be pernicious.

In Nigeria, we should train and empower communities to participate in security measures, rather than arming militias.

The loss of African languages, their link with identity, and their role in forging decolonial futures.

AIAC talk considers Karl Marx’s legacy and we debate whether his ideas are still relevant. Our guests are two thinkers: Annie Olaloku-Teriba and Zeyad el Nabolsy.

The Indigenous people of the Tibesti mountain range that straddles northern Chad and Libya have been neglected and stigmatized by the elites who control and favor development of the south.

The Southern Africa retail chain boasts massive profits, but its workers in Namibia are shortchanged.

Since European colonialism first arrived, Africa has provided its best raw materials to the global North. Can African countries finally break out of this pattern?

The latest COVID-19 crisis in India is overshadowing a farmers’ revolt over land and agriculture. That revolt holds lessons for Africans.

What does the expansion of artificial intelligence in warfare look like in West Africa and other US military outposts?

The intimate connection between the horror unleashed on Europe’s Jews and the preceding centuries of atrocities perpetrated by the “Enlightened” West on those they colonized and enslaved.

There is a lesson in the struggle for South African freedom: South Africans seeking solidarity understood they were speaking to specific audiences, not to an undifferentiated global community, and they strove to meet people where they were.

What do we know about the potential for new kinds of social movements in South Africa?

South Africans fight for “adequate housing,” freedom from eviction, and a government that will progressively realize both of these goals.

On AIAC Talk this week, we mark Independence Day in Sierra Leone, and Freedom Day in South Africa—but what does freedom really mean on the ground in these countries? Watch the show live Tuesday on YouTube.

Amy Jephta and Ephraim Gordon have written and directed a noir TV series that evokes nostalgia and the tension and violence of Cape Town’s nightlife.

This month on Africa Is a Country Radio we wrap up our seasonal theme of port cities, and make a stop in Dakar, Senegal. Listen on Worldwide FM or Mixcloud.

El Sadaawi died on March 21, 2021. Her complex and evolving positions mean there is more than one version of her to commemorate.

Historically, Liberia ignited the imagination of black people across the globe. Then it stopped. What happened, and can it be reversed?