
Stories that will Remain in Darkness
The shortcomings of the film “Shado’man,” a documentary about Freetown, Sierra Leone’s handicapped ‘street boys.’
6428 Article(s) by:
Nathan Chiume is an Africa analyst and consultant.

The shortcomings of the film “Shado’man,” a documentary about Freetown, Sierra Leone’s handicapped ‘street boys.’

What we don’t talk about when we spend time learning about Lupita Nyong’o’s family and getting her name right.

There is no evidence that Nigeria is under attack from gays and lesbians or the nation’s “culture” being eroded from within by “waves of sexual marauders.”

Amazwi Wethu in Cape Town, South Africa, teaches its high student members how to advocate for themselves through film and photography.


Please do your research, stretch your tongue, and practice saying Lupita’s name. The Kenyan actress, born in Mexico, plans be around at the top for a while.

The key question: Are you black? Worry. It is almost always your fault.

The making of Paul Simon’s “Graceland” album was controversial. But it seems we didn’t know the half of it if Steven Van Zandt is to be believed.

A ton of new films by African filmmakers or with African themes are screening at the 2014 edition of the International Film Festival Rotterdam.


New music videos from Tanzania, Senegal, South Africa, Cameroon, Mali, Congo, and Ghana, make up Weekend Music Break Number 66.

When Binyavanga Wainaina, came out as gay recently, he wanted that news to appear in African-owned media and not be misrepresented in Euro-American media.

It is not clear what Ghanaian duo Fokn Bois, on tour in the Netherlands, was doing visiting a boring Dutch town, Liesbeth. But it turned out to be fun.

The problem with Afropolitism is that the insights on race, modernity and identity appear to be increasingly sidelined in sacrifice to consumerism above all else.

Interview with Verene Shepherd, Chair-Rapporteur of the Working Group on People of African Descent.

Jean-Marie Teno’s film, ‘Une Feuille dans le Vent’ (A Leaf in the Wind), lays bare the affective costs of public silence in Cameroon.

The Newscaster Komla Dumor loved sports, basketball (he had skills), and, above all, the beautiful game. He especially loved his Ghana’s Black Stars.

A lost chapter from Binyavanga Wainaina’s memoir, “One Day I Will Write About This Place,” dated 11 July, 2000, the day his mother passed away.