“I have always wanted to be both man and woman, to incorporate the strongest and richest parts of my mother and father within/into me – to share valleys and mountains upon my body the way the earth does in hills and peaks.” Lindokuhle Nkosi looks at black feminism, and the coded language around Caster Semenya
Read MoreLindokuhle Nkosi
On Humour and Horror and Writing the Hurt

“People laugh when you fall on your ass. So what’s funny?” - Basquiat
Read MoreWorming Into the Guts of the Unseen

In the seminal text by Brazilian educator and philosopher Paulo Freire, he argues for learning and teaching as a way to draw closer to a more radical, empathetic humanity. Nolan Oswald Dennis argues for the same in his latest solo show, Options. Lindokuhle Nkosi and Nolan Oswald Denis discuss the function of the underground.
Read MoreMusic casts light on Isandlwana

In a musical lecture at explores amahubo, sonic historian Mbuso Khoza and the African Heritage Ensemble marry art, history and research to explore the story of the British defeat at Isandlwana.
Read MoreA church. A bloodshed. The British. The Boers. A letter from Grahamstown

What is there to say about this place?
Four times, maybe five, I nearly died and this is how I have come to measure my life here. The first time. The door swinging open. (The afternoons still hot and musty like breath. The evenings, a sharp, chilly inhale). The second time and the screams of metal against metal. The third time. The fourth. The fifth.
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