African identity via China and photography
Teju Cole, Noo Saro-Wiwa and Tate curator Osei Bonsu discuss African culture, both at home and around the world, with Laurence Scott.
Writers Teju Cole and Noo Saro-Wiwa and Tate curator Osei Bonsu talk to Laurence Scott.
The exhibition A World in Common: Contemporary African Photography at Tate Modern has a mission statement - to confront reductive representations of African peoples and cultures. All the images are from an African perspective, and explore ideas about masks, spiritual worlds, royalty, family portraits and shared dreams.
The lives of African settlers in China are at the heart of the new book Black Ghosts by Noo Sara-Wiwa. Opportunities for Africans to live and work in China are precarious and tightly controlled, the book explores why many choose to live under such restrictions.
And Teju Cole鈥檚 new novel is entitled Tremor. His central character, a teacher of photography, considers the revaluation of contemporary and historical identity in both Africa and America.
Producer: Julian Siddle
You can find more episodes exploring Black History including episodes on Octavia Butler, the Black Atlantic, Sankofa and Afro-futurism and Zimbabwean writing on the Free Thinking programme website and available on 91热爆 Sounds and as the Arts & Ideas podcast /programmes/p08t2qbp
Last on
More episodes
Broadcast
- Thu 2 Nov 2023 22:0091热爆 Radio 3
Featured in...
The Way We Live Now—Free Thinking
From moral questions to the quirks and pleasures of life.
Visual Arts—Free Thinking
Dorothy Bohm, Edward Burtynsky, Sean Scully, Dada, Elizabeth Price, Edmund de Waal
Discussions and talks from the Free Thinking Festival 2019
Click to listen to discussions, talks and music as the Free Thinking Festival 2019 Gets Emotional
CLICK to LISTEN & SEE programmes from the Free Thinking Festival 2018: The One & the Many
CLICK to LISTEN & SEE all programmes, images, clips & features from 2017's festival
Free Thinking Festival 2017: The Speed of Life