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561 works of pan-African thought. 361 matching current filters.

Allah Is Not Obliged
2000
Ahmadou Kourouma

Birahima, a 12-year-old child soldier in Sierra Leone and Liberia, narrates his journey through the wars with savage humor and moral clarity, consulting four dictionaries to describe events that no dictionary can contain.

West AfricaFiction
Angel
1987
Merle Collins

A multigenerational story of three Grenadian women spanning the colonial era, independence, and the 1979 Grenadian Revolution. Collins, who participated in the revolution herself, writes with insider political passion and communal voice.

CaribbeanFiction
Breath, Eyes, Memory
1994
Edwidge Danticat

Sophie Caco, raised in Haiti, joins her mother in New York at twelve. The novel explores trauma, the body, Haitian traditions of female testing, and the possibilities of healing across generations and between two worlds.

CaribbeanFiction
Brother, I'm Dying
2007
Edwidge Danticat

A memoir about Danticat's father and uncle, two brothers separated by migration, and their parallel deaths in 2004, one from illness, the other in US immigration detention after Hurricane Ivan. A profound meditation on family and American policy toward Haiti.

CaribbeanAutobiography
The Longest Memory
1994
Fred D'Aguiar

Whitechapel, the oldest slave on a Virginia plantation, inadvertently causes his own son's death and must live with that knowledge. Told in multiple voices, a spare, devastating exploration of slavery's moral corruption.

CaribbeanFiction
Disappearance
1993
David Dabydeen

A Guyanese engineer working on a sea-wall project in an English village becomes obsessed with his landlady's past, uncovering layers of colonial history and longing, a meditative novel about memory, belonging, and empire's weight on daily life.

CaribbeanFiction
An Untamed State
2014
Roxane Gay

Mireille, a Haitian-American lawyer, is kidnapped outside her wealthy father's gate and held for ransom. The novel moves between captivity and aftermath, exploring trauma, class inequality in Haiti, and the long work of survival.

CaribbeanFiction
The Signifying Monkey: A Theory of African-American Literary Criticism
1988
Henry Louis Gates Jr.

A theoretical framework rooting African-American literature in the West African tradition of the trickster Esu-Elegbara, showing how Black writers signify on one another and on white literary tradition through double-voiced discourse.

DiasporaNon-fiction
The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness
2010
Michelle Alexander

A legal scholar's argument that mass incarceration has replaced Jim Crow as a system of racial control, targeting Black men through the War on Drugs, stripping rights, and creating a permanent undercaste within the formal law.

DiasporaNon-fiction
My Children! My Africa!
1989
Athol Fugard

A Karoo schoolteacher, a white schoolgirl, and a Black student are caught in late-apartheid violence. The play stages the impossible dilemma of a teacher who believes in non-violent change when the streets demand revolution.

Southern AfricaDrama
Serowe: Village of the Rain Wind
1981
Bessie Head

An oral history of Serowe, Botswana's largest village, assembled from interviews spanning three generations from the reforming chief Khama III to the cooperative movement of the 1960s. Head reveals an Africa that endures and self-organizes.

Southern AfricaNon-fiction
The Collector of Treasures
1977
Bessie Head

Thirteen short stories drawing on Botswana village life, women who endure violence, men who abdicate, and communities that hold together through traditional values and collective memory, illuminating ordinary lives with extraordinary dignity.

Southern AfricaFiction
A Month and a Day: A Detention Diary
1995
Ken Saro-Wiwa

Saro-Wiwa's account of his detention by the Nigerian military government and his campaign for Ogoni rights against Shell's environmental destruction in the Niger Delta.

West AfricaMemoir
Murambi: The Book of Bones
2000
Boubacar Boris Diop

Written shortly after Diop visited Rwanda as part of the Rwanda Writing Project, the novel reconstructs the 1994 genocide through multiple voices — perpetrators, victims, bystanders — at a technical school that became a massacre site.

West AfricaFiction
Your Name Shall Be Tanga
1988
Calixthe Beyala

Two women share a prison cell in Cameroon — Tanga, a teenage prostitute dying of AIDS, and Anna-Claude, a French woman of Algerian origin. As Tanga tells her story, Anna-Claude assumes her identity.

Central AfricaFiction
Wizard of the Crow
2006
Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o

A vast satirical epic set in the fictional African nation of Aburĩria, ruled by an aging dictator building a tower to heaven. Written in Gikuyu and translated by the author, spanning 700+ pages.

East AfricaFiction
Beneath the Lion's Gaze
2010
Maaza Mengiste

Set during the 1974 Ethiopian revolution when Emperor Haile Selassie was overthrown by the Derg military junta, following a family caught between loyalty, survival, and resistance as the country descends into terror.

East AfricaFiction
The Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears
2007
Dinaw Mengestu

Sepha Stephanos, a refugee from Ethiopia who fled a military coup, runs a failing grocery store in a gentrifying Washington D.C. neighborhood. A quiet, devastating novel about displacement and belonging.

East AfricaFiction
One Day I Will Write About This Place
2011
Binyavanga Wainaina

Wainaina's memoir of growing up in Kenya, finding his voice as a writer, and the country's transformation. Lyrical, restless, and formally inventive — as much a portrait of post-colonial African identity as autobiography.

East AfricaMemoir
Abyssinian Chronicles
1998
Moses Isegawa

An epic novel following Mugezi from his birth in Amin's Uganda through Obote's terror and into exile in the Netherlands. Originally written in Dutch by Isegawa, a Ugandan living in Amsterdam.

East AfricaFiction
Manchester Happened
2019
Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi

A short story collection exploring the Ugandan community in Manchester, examining what it means to be Ugandan and British, to carry a homeland inside you while navigating a new one.

East AfricaShort Stories
Our Lady of the Nile
2012
Scholastique Mukasonga

Set in a Catholic girls' school high in the mountains of Rwanda in the 1970s, the novel traces how genocidal ideology seeps into the lives of Hutu and Tutsi students. A haunting prelude to 1994.

East AfricaFiction
The River and the Source
1994
Margaret Ogola

A multigenerational saga following four generations of a Luo family from pre-colonial Kenya through colonialism and independence to the AIDS crisis. Traces African women's strength across a century of change.

East AfricaFiction
Memory in the Flesh
1993
Ahlam Mosteghanemi

A love story set against Algeria's struggle for independence and its troubled aftermath. The first Arabic novel to be written by an Algerian woman, it became the bestselling Arabic novel of its time.

North AfricaFiction
The Sacred Night
1987
Tahar Ben Jelloun

Sequel to The Sand Child; the protagonist, raised as a boy, is now free after her father's death to discover her true female identity — a journey into her own body, desire, and freedom.

North AfricaFiction
This Mournable Body
2018
Tsitsi Dangarembga

Third in Dangarembga's trilogy, following Tambudzai in her 40s, financially desperate and morally compromised in a Zimbabwe collapsing under Mugabe. Written in second person, implicating the reader.

Southern AfricaFiction
An Elegy for Easterly
2009
Petina Gappah

Short stories set in Zimbabwe during Mugabe's collapse — in the high-density suburbs, the collapsing economy, the prisons. Dark, precise, and darkly comic.

Southern AfricaShort Stories
Ways of Dying
1995
Zakes Mda

Set during the final violent years of apartheid, following Toloki, a professional mourner, as he grieves at funerals across the townships. A magical, compassionate novel.

Southern AfricaFiction
Confession of the Lioness
2012
Mia Couto

A lioness is killing women in a remote village. An outsider hunter and the village headman's daughter try to understand the attacks in this haunting exploration of colonial wounds and gendered violence.

Southern AfricaFiction
The Book of Chameleons
2004
José Eduardo Agualusa

Narrated by a gecko, the novel follows a man who forges identities for people who want to erase their pasts — in a country where everyone has something to hide after decades of civil war.

Southern AfricaFiction
The Farming of Bones
1998
Edwidge Danticat

Based on the 1937 Parsley Massacre when Trujillo's forces killed tens of thousands of Haitian sugar cane workers in the Dominican Republic. Amabelle survives and must find a way to live.

CaribbeanFiction
Texaco
1992
Patrick Chamoiseau

Narrated by the elderly Marie-Sophie Laborieux, the novel spans the history of Martinique from slavery through the shantytown of Texaco on the outskirts of Fort-de-France. A polyphonic explosion of Creole language.

CaribbeanFiction
I Am Becoming My Mother
1986
Lorna Goodison

Poetry collection that earned Goodison the Commonwealth Poetry Prize. Grounded in Caribbean landscape, female experience, and Jamaican vernacular, these poems celebrate womanhood across generations.

CaribbeanPoetry
Girl, Woman, Other
2019
Bernardine Evaristo

Twelve characters — mostly Black British women — whose lives intersect in modern Britain. Evaristo's formally inventive prose-poetry creates a chorus of voices spanning generations and social classes.

DiasporaFiction
Mr Loverman
2013
Bernardine Evaristo

Barry, a 74-year-old Antiguan man living in London, has been secretly in love with his best friend Morris for 60 years while maintaining his marriage and reputation. A joyful, heartbreaking novel.

DiasporaFiction
Small Island
2004
Andrea Levy

Two Jamaican immigrants — Hortense and Gilbert — arrive in London in 1948 and rent a room from Queenie, a white woman whose husband has just returned from the war. A rich, humane novel about the Windrush generation.

DiasporaFiction
Inglan Is a Bitch
1980
Linton Kwesi Johnson

Poetry collection in Jamaican patois ('dub poetry'), confronting racism in Thatcher's England, police violence, and the resilience of Black British communities. LKJ's most celebrated collection.

DiasporaPoetry
I Is a Long Memoried Woman
1983
Grace Nichols

A sequence of poems tracing the Middle Passage, slavery, and survival through the voice of a Caribbean woman. Winner of the Commonwealth Poetry Prize.

DiasporaPoetry
Citizen: An American Lyric
2014
Claudia Rankine

A genre-defying work combining poetry, prose, and images to document racial microaggressions, police killings, and the experience of being Black in America. Received every major American poetry prize.

DiasporaPoetry
Life on Mars
2011
Tracy K. Smith

Pulitzer Prize-winning collection meditating on the universe, David Bowie, her father's work on the Hubble Space Telescope, and mortality. Space becomes a lens for examining grief and wonder.

DiasporaPoetry
Zami: A Biomythography
1982
Audre Lorde

Lorde's 'biomythography' of growing up Black, female, and queer in 1950s New York, through her relationships with women, her political awakening, and the Caribbean inheritance of her mother.

DiasporaMemoir
An American Marriage
2018
Tayari Jones

Roy is wrongfully imprisoned shortly after his marriage to Celestial. The years of separation change both of them. A love story about mass incarceration, Black ambition, and what prison does to a people.

DiasporaFiction
Heavy: An American Memoir
2018
Kiese Laymon

Laymon writes a letter to his mother about the violence of his childhood in Mississippi, his body, gambling, food, and the ways Black families carry America's weight. One of the most honest memoirs in American literature.

DiasporaMemoir
The Known World
2003
Edward P. Jones

In antebellum Virginia, a free Black man owns slaves. After his death, his plantation unravels while the county sheriff — also a former slave — struggles to maintain order. A profound meditation on freedom and its perversions.

DiasporaFiction
Possessing the Secret of Joy
1992
Alice Walker

Tashi, a character from The Color Purple, agrees to undergo female genital mutilation as an act of African solidarity — and spends her life dealing with the physical and psychological consequences.

DiasporaFiction
We Should All Be Feminists
2014
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Adapted from Adichie's 2012 TEDx talk, this essay defines feminism for the 21st century from an African woman's perspective — personal, specific, and unapologetic.

West AfricaEssay
The Fishermen
2015
Chigozie Obioma

Four brothers in 1990s Nigeria sneak away to fish in a forbidden river, where a mad prophet tells the eldest that he will be killed by one of his brothers. A biblical, classical tragedy set in Obioma's childhood.

West AfricaFiction
Under the Udala Trees
2015
Chinelo Okparanta

Ijeoma falls in love with a girl during the Biafran War. As Nigeria 'rebuilds,' she must navigate a society hostile to her sexuality while never forgetting what she survived and who she loves.

West AfricaFiction
Born on a Tuesday
2015
Elnathan John

Dantala, a street boy in northern Nigeria, is swept up in electoral violence, finds refuge in a mosque, and watches as the gentle Islam he learns there is overtaken by radicalism. A novel of Nigeria's crisis of faith.

West AfricaFiction
On the Postcolony
2001
Achille Mbembe

Mbembe's landmark philosophical work examining postcolonial African politics — the aesthetics of power, the grotesque performance of authority, and the relationship between the state and its subjects.

Central AfricaPhilosophy
Critique of Black Reason
2013
Achille Mbembe

A historical and philosophical analysis of race — how 'Blackness' was constructed as the lowest category of humanity, what this does to the people categorized, and what a 'universal subject' beyond race might look like.

Central AfricaPhilosophy
The Afrocentric Idea
1987
Molefi Kete Asante

Asante's foundational text of Afrocentrism — the argument that African people must center their own cultural and historical perspectives rather than viewing themselves through a Eurocentric lens.

DiasporaPhilosophy
An Essay on African Philosophical Thought
1987
Kwame Gyekye

A systematic examination of Akan philosophical thought — its ontology, ethics, and concept of the person. Gyekye argues that the Akan philosophical tradition is a genuine philosophy, not ethnophilosophy.

West AfricaPhilosophy
Rosewater
2016
Tade Thompson

In 2066, a Nigerian town has grown up around a mysterious alien biodome. Kaaro, who has psychic abilities from the alien incursion, works for a secret government agency. Part biopunk, part spy thriller, entirely Nigerian.

West AfricaScience Fiction
The Rosewater Insurrection
2019
Tade Thompson

Second in the Wormwood Trilogy, expanding the alien biodome world as Rosewater declares independence from Nigeria. An increasingly complex examination of consciousness, identity, and alien intervention.

West AfricaScience Fiction
Akata Witch
2011
Nnedi Okorafor

Sunny, an albino Nigerian-American girl living in Nigeria, discovers she is a 'free agent' with magical abilities — and must join a secret group of Leopard People to fight a serial killer.

West AfricaScience Fiction
Songs of Enchantment
1993
Ben Okri

Second in Okri's Abiku trilogy, continuing Azaro's story as his family faces more brutal poverty and the spirit world intensifies its hold. The political violence of Nigeria becomes inseparable from spiritual terror.

West AfricaFiction
Infinite Riches
1998
Ben Okri

Third in the Azaro trilogy, following the spirit child and his family to the moment of Nigerian independence. The personal and mythic are inseparable as Nigeria struggles to be born.

West AfricaFiction
The Eye of the Earth
1986
Niyi Osundare

A poetry collection celebrating Yoruba rural life and ecology while mourning its destruction. Osundare's verse is rooted in Yoruba oral tradition, communal and performative.

West AfricaPoetry
Voice of America
2010
E.C. Osondu

Short stories set in refugee camps, Nigerian cities, and America, following people caught between worlds — between war and peace, between home and exile, between who they were and who they're forced to become.

West AfricaShort Stories
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