
Chimurenganyana: La Discotheque De Sarah Maldoror (March 2023)
By Chimurenga / May 31, 2023
decomposed, an-arranged and reproduced by Ntone Edjabe

Chimurenganyana: You Look Illegal by Paula Ihozo Akugizibwe (Feb 2022)
By Chimurenga / March 22, 2022
A mediation on skin, violence, and the limits of citizenship in a country where black lives have long been brutally (mis)handled.

Chimurenganyana: The Fear and Loathing Out of Harare by Dambudzo Marechera (Dec 2021)
By Chimurenga / March 22, 2022
A selection of never-published essays by Dambudzo Marechera with an afterword by writer Tinashe Mushakavanhu

Chimurenganyana: Home Is Where The Music Is by Uhuru Phalafala (September 2021)
By Chimurenga / September 8, 2021
“Home is where the music is” is drawn from Keorapetse Kgositsile’s poem […]

Chimurenganyana: Even When My Soup-curlers Slur, I Still Keep the Take by Georgia Anne Muldrow (June 2021)
By Chimurenga / June 17, 2021
A limited Chimurenganyana edition of Even When My Soup-Curlers Slur, I Still Keep the Take by Georgia Anne Muldrow is now available.

Chimurenganyana: Becoming Kwame Ture by Amandla Thomas-Johnson (Oct 2020)
By Chimurenga / October 21, 2020
Stokely Carmichael (Kwame Ture) was viewed by many during the civil rights […]

FESTAC 77 BOOK (Oct 2019)
By Chimurenga / October 1, 2019
Early in 1977, thousands of artists, writers, musicians, activists and scholars from Africa and the black diaspora assembled in Lagos for FESTAC ’77, the 2nd World Black and African Festival of Arts and Culture. With a radically ambitious agenda underwritten by Nigeria’s newfound oil wealth, FESTAC ’77 would unfold as a complex, glorious and excessive culmination of a half-century of transatlantic and pan-Africanist cultural-political gatherings.