
The Twitter World Cup
You can follow Africa Is a Country as well as some of our writers - particularly Sonja, Sean and Herman - on Twitter.
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You can follow Africa Is a Country as well as some of our writers - particularly Sonja, Sean and Herman - on Twitter.

The breathless reporting of Madonna's various doings in Africa, including when she is given credit for things she didn't even do, should stop.

The achievements of the Somali model and designer, Iman, in a very racist fashion industry, particularly Paris and New York, should be widely celebrated.

I don’t normally post manifestoes, open letters, or poems — but sometimes you have to make an exception.

The chicken fast-food chain’s latest television commercial, riffing on the World Cup, satirizes stereotypical Africa yet risks reproducing the very tropes it mocks instead.

The "Tarzan" films, which dates back to the beginnings of Hollywood, are a perfect visual representation of colonialism in Africa.

Chris Abani's musings on telling African stories gets at just about everything Sonja thinks about as she encounters "Africa" every day, and then attempt to write about it.

The first, and only, half-pipe in East Africa, built entirely by the youth from the Kampala suburb of Kitintale.

Mexican broadcasters are no different from their Euro-American counterparts, in peddling outdated stereotypes about Africa.

When white South Africans do ordinary things, like travel to a black neighborhood, they're showered with platitudes. This is not reserved for their black country fellows.

Lara Pawson's blog post about the way elites and media in the West talk, write and act about the African continent and its people, though hardly to them, is worth reposting here.

For the next month we'll be bombarded with commercials riffing of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. There'll be lots of "African" themes.

Recommended: a short film about the fate of 10,000 residents displaced after a thriving market in Lagos, Nigeria.

Over the next few months, Allison Swank will commence a new weekly series on popular (and not-so-popular) films in the United States 'about' Africa.

In the music video for her latest single, "Rockstar 101," singer Rihanna appears in what looks like blackface.

Commercials tied to the 2010 World Cup sell brands through a tired global template of African-ness: poverty as texture, hardship as atmosphere, resilience as spectacle.

One of the first authoritative, comprehensive reference work covering South Africa’s history, politics, law, society and culture, economy, environment - in one place.

Should our contributor Sonja Sugira, usually a harsh critic of humanitarianism, cut Bono's RED campaign some slack?

The New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof who has made Africa his beat, lectures poor Congolese about their leisure time.

Has Bono made what is the best TV (you can also watch it on Youtube) commercial in the history of the World Cup?