
6426 Article(s) by:
Nathan Chiume
Nathan Chiume is an Africa analyst and consultant.


The Assassins of Memory
The South African question is far too important to accommodate an explanation that is simplistic and childish.

The art of unrest
Cape Town artists, Hasan and Husain Essop, tackle the struggle for land, adequate housing, education and equality in South Africa in their work.

The Decade of People of African Descent
Ten films we can recommend at the 2015 New York African Film Festival. The theme coincides with that of the United Nations and highlights women filmmakers.

Burundi’s growing mess
How did Burundi go from being the hallmark of power-sharing success to an increasingly polarized country?

Whip it Good
The Danish-Trinidadian artist Jeanette Ehlers is using the white man’s tools to strike back.

Africa, in a state of constant self-discovery
Afripedia is a visual guide to contemporary urban culture on the continent.

The people smugglers
Smugglers are in most cases merely the “poor man’s” travel agent; a deregulated, brazen, relatively cheap and lucrative travel agency for refugees and people with no passports.

The Long History of the Garissa Attacks

Baltimore Blues
Rather than spending money to fix massive inequalities, the U.S. funds militarizing the police, incarcerating black youth, and state violence.

44 Years of Walking Past Cecil John Rhodes’ Statue
The Life and Times of Mr Peter Buckton, a worker at the University of Cape Town in South Africa.

Weekend Music Break No.72

New African Disco
Here’s Hipsters Don’t Dance “Top World Carnival Tunes” for April 2015.

What’s at stake when Ethiopians vote on May 24th

Their parents are being told to ‘let it go’
In pictures: These are the faces of the Caravana 43 for the disappeared students of Ayotzinapa, Mexico.

Testing the fitness of our own instincts
The Nigerian writer Emmanuel Iduma talks to American photographer and teacher, Eric Gottesman, about his work in Ethiopia.

Xenophobia and Border Imperialism
To seriously respond to xenophobic violence, start with the deconstruction of border politics and acknowledging the colonial inheritance the border represents between countries.

When Fatou Diome kicked European Union butt
Writer Fatou Diome: It’s the representation that Europe does to the Other that feeds xenophobia.

How Nollywood can save African Literature
African writers produce in literary prose — a language and cultural ethos in which they do not live.

The romanticism of history
The resistance legacy of Brazilian slaves suffers from both romanticism and a spotty historical record. But it also persists as a potent social and cultural symbol.