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Margaret Busby: how a pioneering Ghanaian publisher put African women’s writing on the map

Margaret Busby: how a pioneering Ghanaian publisher put African women’s writing on the map

PUBLISHED in 1992, Daughters of Africa is a groundbreaking volume of writing by women of African descent. It was followed by an expanded second edition, New Daughters of Africa, in 2019. The mind behind the books is pioneering Ghanaian-born publisher, writer and editor Margaret Busby. She became the first Black female publisher in the UK at 20 when she co-founded Allison and Busby in 1967. The company was first to publish a number of significant writers during her two-decade tenure. Busby has continued to nurture new generations of writers, academics, editors, publishers and critics. In May she was in South…
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Senegal delays Dakar Art Biennale by six months

Senegal delays Dakar Art Biennale by six months

THE Senegalese authorities have delayed the Dakar Biennale devoted to African contemporary art, pushing back the start of the capital's prestigious month-long event to November from May, organisers said on Thursday. The 15th edition of the biennale was due to kick off on May 16, but the Youth, Sports, and Culture Ministry said the postponement was necessary due to the determination of newly elected authorities to wait for optimum conditions. The event will now run from November 7 to December 7, it said. In a statement shared on the biennale's official social media channels, the ministry also cited "the constraints…
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Can low-budget, high-quality films help African filmmaking?

Can low-budget, high-quality films help African filmmaking?

A collaboration between Netflix, South Africa’s National Film and Video Foundation (NFVF) and distribution partner, Indigenous Film Distribution, has resulted in the unveiling of 6 films debuting on Netflix. This collaboration marks a significant milestone in the film industry, showcasing the transformative power of micro-budget yet high-quality filmmaking across the continent. Oluwanifemi Obaba, a Nigerian entertainment lawyer, underscores the significance of this as a milestone for the filmmakers, explaining that “securing the necessary resources to finance a movie can be quite tedious, to say the least.” “Funding needs are dynamic and they become necessary at different stages of a film’s…
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Johannesburg in a time of darkness: Ivan Vladislavić’s new memoir reminds us of the city’s fragility

Johannesburg in a time of darkness: Ivan Vladislavić’s new memoir reminds us of the city’s fragility

IVAN Vladislavic is Johannesburg’s literary linkman. He tells us, in the first pages of his new book, The Near North, that before cities were lit, first by gaslight and later electricity, people of means paid torchbearers to escort them through dark and perilous streets. “In Paris,” he observes, “these linkmen were often police spies or informers, while in London they were more likely to be in league with criminals”. For his part, Vladislavic believes that the real linkmen are Johannesburg’s car guards. They emerge from the darkness not so much to guard cars as to give middle-class drivers the illusion…
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Esther Mahlangu: how the famous South African artist keeps her Ndebele culture alive

Esther Mahlangu: how the famous South African artist keeps her Ndebele culture alive

ESTHER Mahlangu is having a retrospective of her world-famous art in Cape Town. Now 88, the South African visual artist is best known for her colourful large-scale murals in the traditional patterns and colours of the Ndebele people of South Africa – once famously displayed on a BMW as part of a global advertising campaign. But how is she regarded by her people and what does her work represent? We asked Sifiso Ndlovu, an expert in the art and identity of the Ndebele people, to tell us more. Who is Esther Mahlangu? Esther Nostokana Mahlangu was born on 11 November…
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This popular Brazilian street food is a delicious link to its African heritage

This popular Brazilian street food is a delicious link to its African heritage

LIVELY conversation blends with the rhythmic sizzle of hot oil in Itapuã, a neighbourhood near the coastal city of Salvador in Bahia State, northern Brazil. The golden brown fritters Ivana Muzenza makes at her stall, known locally as Acarajé, represent more than a tasty snack. Muzenza is a “Baiana”, a Portuguese word that describes an exclusive community of Bahian women who sell street food while dressed in traditional attire; typically a white flowing lace dress, beaded necklaces, and jewellery, with colourful headscarves. Muzenza’s great-great-grandmother arrived in the region towards the end of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. She became a "Ganhadeira…
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West Africa’s fashion designers are world leaders when it comes to producing sustainable clothes

West Africa’s fashion designers are world leaders when it comes to producing sustainable clothes

EVERY few weeks global fast fashion brands mass produce their latest clothing, pumping out garments to be sold around the world. There is growing criticism that it’s socially irresponsible to produce such large volumes of clothes so often. It leads to surplus and waste that takes a toll on the environment. And by requiring new styles so often it also stifles designers’ creativity in an industry that thrives on it. Sustainable fashion means clothes being produced and consumed in ways that are socially responsible. However, the conversation about sustainable fashion has centred mainly on the Western and Asian fashion industries.…
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Beyond images of war: Sammy Baloji’s work captures DR Congo’s vibrant arts and culture, challenging Western views

Beyond images of war: Sammy Baloji’s work captures DR Congo’s vibrant arts and culture, challenging Western views

THE Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) is all too often associated with violent conflict, at the expense of its positive aspects. Reports on this huge country, the second largest in Africa after Algeria, and nearly twice the size of South Africa, tend to overlook its intellectual and artistic vibrancy. My research has focused on this part of the continent. This article is based on two recent contributions in which I examine the DRC’s cultural richness and explore the role and place of mineral extraction in its literature and art. The contribution of the DRC to Africa’s culture is immense. In…
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Tutu Puoane: the South African singer on creating her new album out of Lebo Mashile’s poetry

Tutu Puoane: the South African singer on creating her new album out of Lebo Mashile’s poetry

FROM her base in Belgium, proudly South African singer, artist and actor Tutu Puoane has carved an international career predicated on consistency and mastery. Her new album, Wrapped in Rhythm Vol 1, features the writing of South African poet and cultural activist Lebo Mashile. Born Nonthuthuzelo Puoane in May 1979, she was raised in the Pretoria township of Mamelodi. Townships are urban black areas created under the apartheid policies of South Africa’s former government. Puoane began her artistic training at Fuba (the Federated Union of Black Artists), founded as an alternative training academy for artists denied access to whites-only institutions.…
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Kenyan-made dramas, comedies rival foreign sports in viewership numbers

Kenyan-made dramas, comedies rival foreign sports in viewership numbers

KENYAN viewers are beginning to show a strong preference for locally-produced content, regional giant MultiChoice has revealed, with the appetite and consumption of Kenyan-made films now second only to foreign sports content like the UEFA and English premier leagues. “Some classic shows like 'Hulabaloo', 'Njoro wa uba' in the last six months attracted more than 5 million viewers. Record viewership of 'Kasiri', 'Zari' and the growing dominance of 'Kina' is just amazing. Kenyans are not only watching local content they are actually paying for local content,” said MultiChoice Managing Director, Nzola Miranda during the company's early April Kenya Content Showcase.…
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