African Humanities Programme Fellows plan future involvement with Rhodes University
Rhodes University is currently hosting fellows from the last African Humanities Programme (AHP) cohort. Since 2009, the AHP has awarded fellowships to more than 450 early career scholars in Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda, with the generous support of the Carnegie Corporation of New York (CCNY). The programme that began in 2008-09 was due to conclude in 2020-21 but was extended due to delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
A continent in crisis: Rhodes University academics discuss how the Ukraine-Russia conflict will impact Africa
The Ukraine-Russia conflict has not only devasted many parts of Ukraine but is also having ripple effects throughout the world. The challenges it presents to Africa are particular to its vulnerabilities. At an event hosted by the Internationalisation Office, the Law Faculty, and the Africa Centre, academics from Rhodes University discussed how the war would affect the African continent.
Ramaphosa: Reminded, lobbied and plotted against
President Cyril Ramaphosa has had a busy month, and the list of things that have occupied his mind includes much more than high-profile matters like ending the National State of Disaster.
African Languages student writes first-ever ChiShona PhD thesis at Rhodes University
A PhD student in the African Language Studies Section in the School of Languages and Literatures, Mr Ignatius Mabasa, has been awarded a PhD for the first-ever thesis written in ChiShona at Rhodes University.
Online dictionary aims to broaden research into South African English
The recent release of a data-rich historical dictionary on smartphones and tablets (iOS & Android supported), marks a revolutionary step for the development of resources documenting South African English usage over three centuries.
Violence directed at Durban shack dwellers a betrayal of bet36体育投注_bet36体育在线—激情赢盈中√ ethos of national solidarity
In order to confront the crisis, the language used has rightly been one of war against an enemy for which the resources of the whole country must be mobilised.
AGCLE’s flagship course receives positive worldwide attention
The Allan Gray Centre for Leadership Ethics (AGCLE) at Rhodes University recently received a glowing appraisal for its flagship course, IiNtheto zoBomi, amid an increase in international attention.
The power of theatre to enable social transformation
In the course of 2019, the Rhodes University Drama Department staged several theatre-based performances as vehicles for social intervention and change.
Thina singabantwa base Afrika
The etymology of a word goes a long way in teaching us the history, the routes and the roots of a word as expressed at a joint Rhodes University and Makhanda Black Kollective (MBK) community seminar entitled ‘Ukuhlambulula from an anti-humane world’ in Fingo Village, Makhanda.
Two Rhodes University drama alumni among national playwright competition finalists
The five finalists of the Distell National Playwright Competition of 2020 have been announced.
Senior Research Associate’s presentation unites Oromo people’s difficult past with a hopeful future
Senior Research Associate at Rhodes University’s Cory Library, Dr Sandra Rowoldt Shell, recently spoke at the 33rd annual Oromo Studies Association (OSA) conference, which was held on ‘home ground’ for the first time in history.
The Protection of Traditional Cultural Expressions in Africa
Professor Enyinna Nwauche’s highly anticipated book on traditional cultural expression in Africa has been published.
Film artists engage with Makhanda community
The Rhodes University School of Journalism and Media Studies (JMS) held a collaborative film seminar, Kindo Kadre and the Dream of the Cinema: Outside, Against and Beyond the Abyss, with the Kino Kadre Community Cinema Circle at the Fingo Village Library in Makhanda. The seminar formed part of the Mellon 30th Anniversary Seminar Programme hosted by the JMS in October.
International scholar reignites decolonisation at Journalism Seminar Series
The Rhodes University School of Journalism and Media Studies (JMS) held the first of its final two seminars for the year on 14 October, with the much anticipated visit of University of Coimbra’s (Portugal) Sociology Professor Boaventura de Sousa Santos, at the Eden Grove Lecture Complex.
Unlearning as a means to bring hope to higher education
The 2018 DCS Oosthuizen Memorial Lecture took place at Rhodes University’s Eden Grove Blue Lecture Theatre on Friday, the 28th of September 2018.
LLB NATIONAL REVIEW: REVISED REACCREDITATION OUTCOMES
The Council on Higher Education (CHE) on Wednesday, 15 November 2017, released its revised reaccreditation outcomes concerning the Higher Education Quality Committee’s (HEQC’s) National Review of LLB Programmes. Rhodes’s LLB has been reaccredited, subject to meeting one specific condition, on which it must report to the CHE by 10 May 2018.
Factionalism and Robert Mugabe’s Leadership in Zimbabwe
No one is safe in Zimbabwe, not even Mugabe thinks he is safe.”
African languages have the power to transform universities
A history lecturer teaching a class about the history of the Xhosa people in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province stops speaking English for a few minutes.
The sickness of xenophobia, and the need for a politics of healing
The never-ending saga of xenophobic violence has again engulfed South Africa. Again the same platitudes are repeated by commentators
Racial terror from Columbus to Charleston
Since the 1920s, Charleston has been the name of a dance, a dance with roots in Africa, made white and famous on Broadway.
Recognition for rising star
Young choreographer celebrated for two dance pieces. Rising star choreographer Nomcebisi Moyikwa, winner of an unprecedented two ovations in one day at the National Arts Festival, started dancing as a 10-year-old in Grahamstown’s community halls.
Listening to 'Born Frees'
"ARE they really born free?" asked Vanessa Malila this week at the beginning of a talk she gave on the term Born Free, which is usually used to indicate a young South African born after 1994.
Why Fanon continues to resonate more than half a century after Algeria’s independence
Algeria marks its 53rd year of independence from France this month. The bitter struggle for freedom in the late 1950s and early 1960s became a central focus of the global movement against colonialism
ANC attacks have left sections of SA media ‘compromised’: Maimane
PW Botha used “Total Strategy” to take government propaganda to a whole new level. BJ Vorster sought to control the news by effectively bankrolling and controlling a newspaper.
South African students must be given the chance to read what they like
University curricula in South Africa are still largely European or American in origin and focus. In some spaces, though, academics are starting to shift the terrain by introducing an African-centred curriculum.
Enter Astronautus Afrikanus
A dream of Zambian ‘Afronauts’: The play Astronautus Afrikanus is the world of Edward Mukuka Nkoloso and his dream of beating America and the USSR in the space race with his team of Zambian ‘afronauts’. The play and its setting at Rhodes University, makes for a fascinating project.
Africanism through the eyes of Mwenya Kabwe
Theatre Maker, Performer and Lecturer at the University of the Witwatersrand, introduced her acclaimed style of immersive theatre when she visited Grahamstown for the first time as a facilitator at the Rhodes University Drama Department and not as a performer for the Arts Festival.
Ethics of poetic ethnicities
How I wish I could, like many, pretend that the ethics of poetry are engraved on a rock somewhere at the centre of the global village — an assumption that downplays the fact that one’s domicile, environment and experience directly informs his literary outlook.
Dancer brings social issues to the foray
Resident and choreographer Nadine Joseph is set to perform her show The Fear of Loss at the upcoming Detours: Re-routing Movement Composition Dance Festival at The Downstairs Theatre at The University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) from 13 to 23 May.
A legacy carried forward
The men in robes and animal skins bore simple wooden staffs as they stepped jovially down the paths in Mvezo.
Meeting my grandfather in Pollsmoor jail
Mandla Mandela tells Zine George about a confusing first encounter that led to a deep relationship Mandla Mandela was 12 years old when he met his grandfather for the first time.
Born free mindset drove Mandela struggle legacy
I WAS not born with a hunger to be free. Nelson Mandela writes in his autobiography.
Myths deny Mandela’s belief in the limits of leadership
THE greatest irony of most Nelson Mandela eulogies is that they make him what he did not want
Mandela on trial: the ethical core
When Mandela was captured in 1962 the police did not know that he had been overseas for
Nelson Mandela: The Crossing
[D]eath is always close by, and what's important is not to know if you can avoid it, but to know that you have done the most possible to realize your ideas. - Frantz Fanon, 1961.
Nelson Mandela Visiting Professor bids farewell to Madiba
I, along with millions, perhaps even billions, lit a candle on the 5th of December 2013
The youth can take a leaf out of the book of a man in touch with his masculinity
The youth can take a leaf out of the book of a man in touch with his masculinity
Living out our differences-Reflections on Mandela
In a wide-ranging interview before his death a year ago, Jakes Gerwel-academic, vice-chancellor and chief aide to Nelson Mandela