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24 September 2014
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Africa Lives On The 91Èȱ¬
The pupils featured in African School as part of Africa Lives on the 91Èȱ¬

Africa Lives On The 91Èȱ¬

91Èȱ¬ FOUR



African School

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This ground-breaking series captures the daily lives, concerns and personalities of young Africans and their teachers in the Ugandan town of Masindi.

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Captured on film are the stories of celebration and challenge that will strike a chord with anyone who has ever been to school: teenage romance, exam pressure, football tournaments, special needs teaching, prefect elections, religion and sex education.

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But in Masindi, school life is played out against the tough environment of Uganda.

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Despite this, the series shows the extraordinary enthusiasm and openness of the pupils and teachers, and gives an entertaining, refreshing and uplifting insight into understanding what life is really like in Africa today.

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Building Africa

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The acclaimed young architect David Adjaye travels through Africa to unravel the secrets of the continent's surprising architectural history.

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In a journey that takes him from the eerily beautiful mud buildings of Mali to Mussolini's experiment in architectural modernism in Eritrea, Adjaye untangles the cultural and imperial influences which have shaped African architecture.

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After visiting Rwanda (a country still rebuilding itself after the genocide of the Nineties), and Ghana (the country of his own roots), Adjaye concludes his odyssey in South Africa, where a new High Court building is being constructed out of bricks reclaimed from the old apartheid-era prison.

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TV Africa

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Cultural critic Ekow Eshun goes on a journey through Africa to discover the state of television in Africa.

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His first stop is South Africa, which has only had TV since 1976 – he meets the winner of African Big Brother; the cast of the hard-hitting soap opera Soul City, which regularly features challenging storylines on HIV and domestic violence; and talks about the new phenomenon of celebrity with a hot new reality TV host.

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In Ghana, Ekow discovers the booming world of TV evangelism, and the new commercial world of HipLife videos.

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And in Kenya, he finds a society discovering the benefits of a relatively independent news media since the change of government – and takes part in a hit comedy series featuring a succession of Kenyan tribespeople.


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