Chimurenga – Miss Read

Chimurenga

Chimurenga, a pan African platform of writing, art and politics founded by Ntone Edjabe in 2002. Drawing together a myriad voices from across Africa and the diaspora, Chimurenga takes many forms operating as an innovative platform for free ideas and political reflection about Africa by Africans.

Outputs include a journal of culture, art and politics of the same name (Chimurenga Magazine); a quarterly broadsheet called The Chronic; the Chimurenga Library – an ongoing invention into knowledge production and the archive that seeks to re-imagine the library; the African Cities Reader – a biennial publication of urban life, Africa-style; and the Pan African Space Station (PASS) – an online radio station and pop-up studio.
Stories About Music in Africa - Vol 1
Varios, Stories About Music in Africa - Vol 1, Chimurenga, 2024 © Varios

Introducing Stories About Music in Africa - Vol. I, a limited edition handmade box set featuring four publications from our Chimurenganyana series. Available in four unique designs.



Included in this edition is:



- The Making of Mannenberg by John Edwin Mason

- A Silent Way: Routes of South African Jazz, 1946-1978 by Julian Jonker

- 52 Niggers by Stacy Hardy

- Thinking of Brenda by Njabulo Ndebele

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Chimurenganyana: The Breathers
Stacy Hardy and Daniel Borzutzky, Chimurenganyana: The Breathers, Chimurenga, 2024 © Stacy Hardy and Daniel Borzutzky

The Breathers is an attempt to experiment with ways to document both the suppression of breath caused by capitalism, and the liberation of breath, or, the mere act of breathing as a form of political resistance to those forces that confront our bodies with what cannot be said, what cannot be seen, and what cannot be done.



A necessarily collaborative project, where authored voices exist in chorus with other poets – from Africa and the Americas - who have given voice to how breath has and continues to be suppressed and exploited, while opening up potentialities and promises for liberation that might emerge from our differentiated yet collective breathing.

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Chimurenganyana: The Garden Letters of Yvonne Vera
Tadiwa Madenga, Chimurenganyana: The Garden Letters of Yvonne Vera, Chimurenga, 2023 © Tadiwa Madenga

In the 1990s, Yvonne Vera wrote garden letters to friends, lovers, and readers of Bulawayo’s Chronicle newspaper. They were literary meditations, writings that questioned if the myth of the garden could be hijacked from its colonial origins and used to restore a sacred relationship with nature for Black people. In this monograph, Tadiwa Madenga travels to Bulawayo to retrace Yvonne Vera’s life and works through her letters, columns, novels, gallery curations, and her former homes. It is a story written for those who love gardens and those who seek to trespass them.

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