2008 Africa Reading Challenge, revised

Pernille’s joined the 2008 Africa Reading Challenge, and her list has me reconsidering mine:

1. The Weekenders, Travels in the Heart of Africa (Southern Sudan)
What would happen if you took some of Britain’s best writing talent, put them on a plane and flew them to one of the most extraordinary and inaccessible places on the planet? What would happen if you took Irvine Welsh from the streets of Edinburgh and showed him a remote, dangerous village in Africa? What would happen if you flew Alex Garland into one of the world’s most hazardous war zones? And how would Tony Hawks react if you dragged him away from his tennis and asked him to write a song with a Sudanese tribesman? With Victoria Glendinning, Andrew O’Hagan, Giles Foden and WF Deedes, these writers have experienced for themselves one of the most beautiful and yet troubled lands in the world – The Sudan.

2. Che in Africa (Congo)
In April 1965, Ernesto ‘Che’ Guevara left Cuba and mysteriously disappeared, eventually resurfacing in revolutionary Bolivia, where he lived until his assassination in October 1967. Now we know that he spent most of 1965 and 1966 in Central Africa, helping anti-Mobuto revolutionaries in the Republic of Congo. This new volume is a collection of writings from and about those years: fragments of letters he wrote, bits of an unpublished manuscript called Pasajes de la guerra revolucionar!a: Congo (which Che wrote shortly after leaving the Congo), and transcripts of interviews with Che’s compatriots.

Can I do more than six books? How about eight, since yesterday I started re-reading Martin Meredith’s The Fate of Africa? I read the first four chapters of this book before my first trip to Uganda two years ago, but at the time I was trying to write a thesis and plan my post-collegiate life, and it didn’t really grab me. I cracked it open again last night and read chapter five, which talks about Jomo Kenyatta and the Kikuyu role in Kenya’s independence.

Talk about eerily relevant.

2008 Africa Reading Challenge

Dave at siphoning off a few thoughts has posted an Africa Reading Challenge for 2008. The basics:

Participants commit to read – in the course of 2008 – six books that either were written by African writers, take place in Africa, or deal significantly with Africans and African issues.

This coincides so nicely with Chris Blattman’s Africa reading list that I’m jumping in.

Here’s my list:

1. Ryszard Kapuściński’s The Emperor: Downfall of an Autocrat

2. Paul Collier’s The Bottom Billion

3. Jeremy Weinstein’s Inside Rebellion

4. Barbara Kingsolver’s The Poisonwood Bible

5. Michaela Wrong’s I Didn’t Do It for You

6. Something (I haven’t decided yet) by Naguib Mahfouz

Reviews to come….

Found via Bazungu Bucks.

GVO Uganda: Citizen Uganda: Smart and very, very pretty

My next piece is up at Global Voices Online:

To scroll down the main page of Citizen Uganda is to indulge in a visual symphony: carefully selected photos align harmoniously with well-crafted blocks of text. Thick lines in complementary colors separate commentary from current events. Trios of links gracefully rotate, gliding from entertainment tips to featured blogs to Africa-focused videos and back again with the ease of a concert harpist trailing her fingers over the strings.

In short: Citizen Uganda is the best new online source of information about Uganda, and it’s also very, very pretty.

Read more »

Anne Applebaum on Kenya

From Slate: Kenya’s Problems Aren’t Uniquely African: It’s not just “tribal enmity plus poverty equals violence.”

Uganda, Rwanda, Liberia, Somalia, Sudan, Sierra Leone—tribal enmity plus poverty equals violence. Kenya is another country evolving into a failed state. Doesn’t it prove, once again, that Africa is an exception to all the rules about global development, democratization, and “progress”?

Actually, it doesn’t. In fact, the closer one looks at Kenya, the less exceptional Africa seems. What was most striking to me about the recent violence in Kenya was not how much the country resembles Rwanda, but rather how much it resembles, say, Ukraine in 2004 or South Korea in the 1980s.

2007 Uganda Best of Blogs

Over at The Kampalan, Dee has just announced the 2007 Uganda Best of Blogs awards. Check out her post for the nomination specifics, but here are the categories:

Ugandan blog of the year — open to any blog written by a Ugandan or focusing on Uganda

Best post — The single best piece in the Ugandan blogosphere

Best blog in Uganda — Written by anyone living in Uganda in 2007

Best overseas Ugandan blog — Any Uganda-focused or Ugandan-authored blog written in a foreign country

Best writing — Intelligent, witty, feisty, eloquent or just plain funny

Best design — Best overall design and layout

Best photography — Best photo taken by a Ugandan blogger and posted on his or her blog