
6439 Article(s) by:
Rita Nketiah
Rita Nketiah is a feminist researcher, writer and activist living in Accra, Ghana.


Rastafari and His Imperial Majesty
It’s understandable that Rastafari aren’t critical about Haile Selassie, but the idealization of the monarch and Ethiopia in general can prevent critical analysis.

Criminal Media
South Africa’s mainstream media has a blindspot: It mostly covers crime as it affects the suburbs and whites. No wonder the readers are misinformed.

A story is the only time you can have my attention
Blitz the Ambassador talks to us about his new EP, ‘The Warm Up,’ ahead of his Brooklyn, NY, show tonight.
Zimbabwe’s Forgotten 20%

Elections and Ethnicity in Guinea
There is a certain deja vu about how Alpha Conde stays in power: every time there’s an election he exploits ethnic divisions.

The Black Atlantis
The negative effects of tourism, globalization, and commercialization in Zanzibar.

Israel calls them infiltrators
Meron Estefanos Meron speaks to us about her ongoing work with Eritrean refugees and migrants, many who live in Israel.

The complicated history of a famous photograph
The story of how the most famous portrait of a young Chinua Achebe was taken at his house in Enugu, Nigeria in 1959 by American photographer, Eliot Elisofon.

“Exceptional kaffirs”
The grumblings of dissatisfaction and anger among black readers over stories about deserving blacks in South Africa.

Fok Your Hood
Next time you see billboards advertising Cape Town as the “World Design Capital,” know them for what they are.

Deadline Congo
Harry Belafonte and Martin Scorsese are planning a TV series on King Leopold II of Belgium’s brutal rule in the Congo.

Golden Lions
A conversation with the curators of the Angolan Pavilion at the 2013 Venice Biennale.

Great Literature and the Screen
Film adaption of an epic novel is a fine and difficult art; one that the creators of “Half of a Yellow Sun” did not pull off.
Two responses to Mindy Budgor, “Maasai warrior princess”

Artifact Art Restitution and Western “Co-operation”
How can the Nigerian government be willing to lend treasured objects to an institution tha still keeps the shameful booty from colonialism’s crimes?

Futuristic Folklore
Considering James Town’s weighty history, which played a huge part in shaping Ghana, it seems only right that when re-imagining a future Accra we start at the place where the city began.

The #Bullshit Files: Mindy Budgor, ‘the first female Maasai warrior’

White Springbok rugby fans and quotas
The writer, Lloyd Gedye, can handle most things, but the mischaracterization of attempts to deracialize the Springbok rugby team, made his blood boil.

Visual Intimacy
Andrew Dosunmu’s film “Mother of George” is a film about love and tradition set amongst Nigerian immigrants in New York City.