
Published by Chimurenga, the Chronic is quarterly pan African newspaper that gives voice to all aspects of life on the continent and celebrates our capacity to continually produce something bold, beautiful and full of humour.
Produced in Cape Town, Johannesburg, Nairobi, Paris, Lagos, Yaoundé, Accra, Kinshasa, Dakar, Kampala and Delhi, and distributed globally, it seeks to write Africa in the present and into the world at large, as the place in which we live, love and work.
The new issue, available now, features reportage, creative non-fiction, autobiography, satire, analysis, photography and illustration to offer a richly textured engagement with everyday life.
In its pages artists and writers from around the world take on the philanthropic complex to unravel the philosophies of dependency and power at play in the civil society of African states. Paula Akugizibwe assumes observer status at the African Union to uncover the charm offensive that keeps the West in control, while Parselelo Kantai exposes the manufacture of post-election peace in Kenya. Also, we journey into the AU headquarters in the heat of the political crisis in Mali and speak with Raila Odinga about the arithmetic skills of Kenya’s Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission.
Elsewhere Yves Mintoogue and Adewale Maja-Pearce diagnose the First Lady Syndrome in the political patronage of Chantou Biya and Dame Jonathan; Agri Ismaïl eavesdrops in on Islamic finance after the market crash; Deji Toye looks at the Nigerian art of patronage; and Cédric Vincent exposes the political rhetoric that caused all the chaos at both Benin biennales of 2012.
As an alternative, three pan-African art projects overcome maps and institutional bureaucracy through networks and synergies; Ghana’s controversial duo FOKN Bois fuck with the puritanical mores in the world’s most religious country; and we listen in on the rebirth of the new thing in Cape Town’s jazz scene.
The Chronic also goes back to university to recount seventeen stories of love and learning under the World Bank and interviews Fred Moten and Stefano Harney on the possibility of staging a revolution “with and for” the university.
The wide-ranging sports coverage kicks off with Bongani Kona’s reflection on Zimbabwean players in South African rugby. In addition, Simon Kuper points out Africa’s best footballers aren’t African and Akin Adesokan learns 24 tricks of the forehand from Roger Federer.
The stand-alone Chronic Books magazine is a self help guide on reading and writing. Learn how to be a Nigerian from Peter Enahoro, Nigeria’s ‘woman of letters’ and the masters of Onitsha Market Literature. Get advice on how to live and how to write from Mohsin Hamid and Werewere Liking; meet the next generation of playwrights; and find out why you should be reading Ken Saro-Wiwa, Jose Saramago, Eric Miyeni, Andile Mngxitama, Gonçalo Tavares, Vivek Narayanan, Nthikeng Mohele, A. Igoni Barrett, Abdellatif Laâbi, Gabriela Jauregui and many more.
Get the print addition of the Chronic from select retailers throughout South Africa (including Exclusive Books, selected Spaza, independent bookstops and on the street in the first week of release), as well as in select shops in Abuja, Lagos, Nairobi, New York, London, Berlin and The Netherlands (get a for a full list of stockists worldwide here).
The Chronic is also available as both a print and digital edition in the online shop.
The Chimurenga Chronic is funded by the German Federal Cultural Foundation and the Goethe-Intitut.
Chimurenganyana: Forest Notebooks by Mario Lewis (April, 2025)
Chimurenganyana: Forest Notebooks by Mario Lewis (April, 2025)
"How could my art, born from an intimate engagement with ecology, exist within a system that so often exploits the very land it depends on? This tension is unresolved, a friction I carry with me... Forest Notebooks is not an escape from these questions but a confrontation with them. It is an attempt to transcend the traditional boundaries of art and knowledge production, to forge a practice that contributes to human development, empowerment, and ecological consciousness. The forest taught me that growth is not linear, that belonging is not ownership, and that true creativity emerges not in isolation but in reciprocity." -- Mario Lewis, "The forest as teacher" from Forest Notebooks.
Mario Lewis's Forest Notebooks is part of "Black Echologies", a new series of practice-based notebooks produced by Chimurenga in collaboration with Nyabinghi Lab, to challenge mainstream ecological discourse—its coloniality and exclusion of indigenous knowledge. Through this series, we invite thinkers, artists and communities to share intuitions, visions and reflections from their own land, air, or water-based practice.
Mario Lewis is an artist and educator based in Saint James, Trinidad and Tobago. His current work centres on agricultural sustainability, agroforestry, methods which focus on returning the land to its natural state, and on exploring opportunities through the Forest Notebooks International Residency—an artist exchange program.
Size: 188mm x 245mm
Pages: 113pp (plus cover)
Printing: blue, black and red, with illustrations, Munken Pure 90gsm with Risograph
Language: English
ISBN: 978-1-0672227-9-6


