Chimurenga 1 – Music is the Weapon (April 2002)

“…The struggle of black people inevitably appear in an intensely cultural form because the social formation in which their distinct political traditions are now manifest has constructed the arena of politics on ground overshadowed by centuries of metropolitan capitalist development, thereby denying them recognition as legitimate politics. Blacks conduct a class struggle in and through race. The BC of race and class cannot be empirically separated, the class character of black struggles is not a result of the fact that blacks are predominantly proletarian, thought this is true…”- (Frank Talk Staff Writers in ‘Azania Salutes Tosh’ – circa 1981)

front cover:

Tosh by Steve Gordon

back cover:

Kippie by Basil Breakey


Waithood Magazine Issue 1 - On Rest (Waithood, SU, Lda, 2024)

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Waithood Magazine Issue 1 - On Rest (Waithood, SU, Lda, 2024)

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WAITHOOD Magazine explores the intersection between contemporary art, the urban landscape, and the youth experience, interpreting exhibition making and publishing as exciting formats of putting these interests into practice.

The first issue presents an avenue through which Black artists, writers and makers imagine futures otherwise and do the required labour to muster a real, living and ever-present black vernacular which is ancient, young, queer and on the move!

Departing from initial investments in understanding the present conditions black artists are expected to thrive, the magazine project adopts a contextualizing tone, in that it takes advantage of a critical approach to notions of time (linear and sequential), offering multiple readings of the present condition, considering not only distorted notion of past but also the role of silences, memory and nostalgia on imagining futures otherwise.

Dwelling in most of the cases with the inherited settler colonial infrastructures, the magazine offers a counter reading of the ‘worlding,’ reducing all kinds of normalizations as a mere product of a white imagination that can be grasped in the concept of modernity.

With contributions from - Ana Raquel Machava, Pauline Buhlebenkosi Ndhlovu, Nombuso Mathibela, Neec Nonso, Lolo Arziki, Usher Nyambi, Marilú Mapengo Namoda, Chonga Pessana, Clio Koopman, Johnson Nhacula, Ildefonso Colaço, Onyinye Alheri, Banji Chona, Jean-Claude Nazarii

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Rhythms of a Road, Voices of an Ethnographer

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