6439 Article(s) by:
Miguna Miguna
Miguna Miguna is a Kenyan activist and lawyer.
The World of Congolese artist Pume Bylex

The Racial Politics of Tuareg Nationalism
Historian Greg Mann is not a big fan of Tuareg group, Tinariwen. The music is alright, he agrees, but the politics is rancid.
Friday Bonus Music Break, N°6

The shareholders of Jesus Inc.
God is the fastest-growing business in Nigeria and elsewhere in Africa. It may be time we agitate for our governments to raise taxes on these corporations.

Cape Town: Beautiful Ugly
The city’s past and its predilections render neat formulations like Creole city and European city equally hollow.

We are the remains
This is Number 11 in my occasional series of posts highlighting the music of my hometown, Paris, also a center of Europe’s African diaspora.
The Jacob Zuma Era

Africa’s first trans music star
The popular Kudurista, Titica, is one of the the top stars of this growing Angolan dance music form.
The Road Down to ‘Africa’

If Africa really is a country …
One of our readers took our title literally.

Disco Angola (in New York City)
Putting postcolonial Angola and postindustrial New York in visual touch.

The talented Tajdin sisters
They’re making a film about “a love story set in Cape Town South Africa that chronicles the life of Leila, a young Cape Malay girl who falls in love with an American boy, Derek, who happens to be black.”
Tinariwen speaks on the coup in Mali

Cheikh Amadou Bamba Day

The Hissène Habré “political and legal soap opera”

The new type of Senegalese
One of the key groups that engineered the ousting of Senegalese president, Abdoulaye Wade – he wanted to change the constitution to stay in power – was a youthful grassroots social movement group founded by a collective of rappers.

The Sudanese pioneer of African cinema
In 1969, Gadalla Gubara and his friends, Ousmane Sembene, Timité Bassori and Mustapha Alassane came up with an idea: FESPACO.

Brand Kuduro
How a music genre is selling Angola’s oil boom.