
6437 Article(s) by:
Rita Nketiah
Rita Nketiah is a feminist researcher, writer and activist living in Accra, Ghana.


The University as a Place to Think
How we harness knowledge to the ethical injunctions we uphold against marginality, pain or suffering, on a global scale.

5 Questions for a Filmmaker–Teddy Goitom

Remembering Differently
Slavery, despite its centrality to South Africa’s founding, remains on the periphery of popular and institutional memory there.

Between polarization and transition
Brazil, under the Workers’ Party, even if it’s still struggling with enormous poverty and social inequality, has managed to improve tremendously.

The guns in the shooting gallery
Mexico has never healed from the state violence that meets student revolts, dating back to 1968.

The Rise of Grace Mugabe of Zimbabwe
With the exception of Hillary Clinton’s attempt at entering politics during Bill Clinton’s first term as president there hasn’t been a more contentious First Lady.

Lost in Frustration
Can we teach about Latin America not exploiting its shock-value or as a ready-to-consume entity?

Weekend Special, No 1002

Apartheid Israel
Is it fair to compare Israel to Apartheid South Africa? And no, making the comparison is not antisemitic.

Edwin Chota is dead
What’s driving the violence against Latin American environmentalists?

The Struggle of Afrocolombian Music
Understanding the complex cultural history of Africolombians and how difficult it has been for its artists to fight for recognition.

How not to write about Africa: Use “African Spring”
The “Arab Spring” has become our reference point for revolutions in this digital age, including in Africa south of the Sahara. It’s ahistorical.

Constant Messiah
Singer Kaneng Lolang is a cosmopolitan currently living in Ouagadougou. She’s spent quality time in Siberia and Brooklyn, but her roots are in Nigeria, Lagos, specifically

Africa Cartoons
A digital archive featuring the work of over 180 cartoonists from throughout the African continent.

The Right to Grow Old: Photos of the Central American Migrant Crisis
#SAHipHop2014: @Okmalumkoolkat has a new album

Music Video Premiere: DJ Mellow and Steloo’s “Séké”

Is it a good idea to use blackface to shame racism?
The Dutch filmmaker Sunny Bergman put on blackface to fight the racist caricature Zwarte Piet.

The photographer Paul Strand’s Portraits of 1960s Ghana
With Kwame Nkrumah’s support, Strand’s last major photographic project was of Ghana over three months between 1963 and 1964.