Coups and phalluses
The moral of Grace Mugabe of Zimbabwe: While men continue to share the spoils of their misrule, it seems there must always be a harlot who can be brought to heel.
The moral of Grace Mugabe of Zimbabwe: While men continue to share the spoils of their misrule, it seems there must always be a harlot who can be brought to heel.
From the perspective of the past, there is little evidence to invest much hope in the “successful transition” trope still reverberating in the international media about Zimbabwe.
In the four decades that Robert Mugabe was at the helm of power in post-colonial Zimbabwe, his rule was anything but admirable.
I write this quick note as an outsider (and well aware of my physical distance from
In Southern Africa, former liberation movements reclaim ownership over history and society not by seeking but by remaining in power.
Zimbabwe is the fourth country in Southern Africa to have a post-independence coup. (The others are
It would be an understatement to sum it up as a tragic tale.
We consider ourselves an indispensable and integral part of its national life, because it is our home, writes a Zimbabwean scholar.
Zimbabwe's regime does not to surrender to anyone its guardianship of the post-independence narrative, symbols and authority.
All sorts of countercultural, even radical signifiers have been ransacked of their meaning in Zimbabwe.
In late August and early September, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg visited Nigeria’s Silicon Lagoon and Kenya’s
Zimbabwe is going through an evolution, not a revolution. Over the past few weeks, pundits and
In Zimbabwe, the leap from online conversation to citizen protest has followed the same path as other protest movements around the world.
Following weeks of public demonstrations against corruption, bad governance and a rapidly deteriorating economy, people all
2015’s last episode of Africa is a Radio features a snippet from an extended interview with
The feminist Bella Matabanadzho remembers Zimbabwean academic and activist Sam Moyo carrying his "intellectual smarts with so much ease."
Lions and black people are not the same or even straightforwardly comparable. But it is true that something wants them both dead.
We head to Zimbabwe for the continuation of our Fresh Eyes series. Based in Bulawayo, KB
Johannesburg artists investigate power and its structures to interrogate the invisible forces that create them and to imagine alternatives.
I is for Independence: That revolutionary moment when we as a new cowntry, ended our reliance on colonial governments for civil services, and instead, started relying on NGOs.