Sokari Douglas Camp CBE lives and works in Elephant and Castle, South London. She was born in Buguma, Nigeria, in 1958. After attending an English Boarding Scho...
Ahead of the first UK event for her latest novel, Like A Mule Bringing Ice-Cream to the Sun, where she appears in conversation with author, Sarah Winman, and ch...
“When trying to resolve the issue of empowering African Women, any talk of black economic empowerment, economic diversification or industrialisation done in the...
7 THINGS I’VE LEARNT AT THE OPENING DAY OF THE 5TH ANNUAL IGBO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE 2016
Friday 1st of April was the first day of the 5th annual Igbo Con...
People of the City’ is What’s On Africa’s version of the Proust questionnaire. We ask exciting people across the city a series of questions. They can answer as...
I See You, a pertinent play about post-Apartheid Johannesburg from Mongiwekhaya. Handled with aplomb by Noma Dumezweni in her directorial debut. The play is on ...
A budding new writer from the Democratic Republic of Congo has won the highly coveted Etisalat Prize for Literature for 2015. The evening ceremony was held in L...
The oral history of the sector is that at some event in 1994 a number of artists discussed with Marie McCluskey, a senior dance practitioner, the idea...
The exhibition Things Fall Apart, at Calvert 22 foundation unveils the short-lived romance between Soviet Russia and the Third World during the Cold W...
Many of us will remember hearing about the NHS doctors and nurses who risked their lives to fight Ebola in West Africa. Pauline Cafferkey, who caught Ebola and ...