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561 works of pan-African thought. 361 matching current filters.
Gyekye examines whether African tradition and modernity are compatible, arguing for a 'moderate communitarianism' that draws on African values of community without sacrificing individual rights.
A systematic philosophical analysis of Ubuntu ('I am because we are'), arguing that Ubuntu is not merely an ethic but a complete ontology that should ground African philosophy and governance.
Ali and Kauna are neighbors in the Namibian village of Oshaantu. When Kauna's abusive husband dies, the village is divided. A quiet, powerful examination of gender, culture, and community.
Benjamin Tichafa fights in Zimbabwe's liberation war and returns to a peace that disappoints him. One of the finest fictional accounts of the chimurenga struggle and its complex aftermath.
Third volume of Farah's Blood in the Sun trilogy, set as Somalia collapses into clan warfare. Kalaman, a young man, unravels secrets about his family's past that mirror Somalia's political unraveling.
A cast of characters living in a decaying Cairo apartment building stand in for Egyptian society: a corrupt aristocrat, a Coptic Christian, a Islamist, a journalist, a gay man living in a rooftop shack.
Two love stories across a century — an English woman who falls in love with an Egyptian nationalist in 1900, and her American great-niece who discovers the story in 1997 — weaving together the colonial and the contemporary.
Continuing the story where Scheherazade left off, Mahfouz sets new tales in a timeless Cairo, where djinn, sultans, and ordinary people live together. A meditation on justice, power, and the divine.
Two parallel stories of Xhosa people separated by 150 years — the 1856 cattle-killing prophecy that destroyed the Xhosa nation, and a contemporary village debating whether to allow a casino and tourism resort.
A poor white Afrikaner family lives in Triomf, a suburb built on the rubble of Sophiatown. Set in the final days before South Africa's first democratic election, a black comedy of white decline.
Antjie Krog covered South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission for radio, and this book is her account — testimonies, poetry, analysis, and her own emotional unraveling as she witnessed the TRC hearings.
Beah's account of being conscripted as a child soldier in Sierra Leone's civil war at age 12, his rehabilitation, and his life in New York. One of the most widely read African memoirs.
Though set in Afghanistan, this novel about Amir and Hassan crosses the lines of ethnicity (Pashtun vs. Hazara) and explores guilt, redemption, and the destruction of a country. Included as a North African/Middle Eastern diaspora text.
Third volume of the Algerian Quartet, weaving together the story of a filmmaker's love affair and the 146 BCE destruction of Carthage, exploring how women's voices are lost to history and recovered.
Gilroy argues that Black Atlantic culture — crossing Africa, Europe, America, and the Caribbean — cannot be reduced to any single national or ethnic tradition. Music, literature, and politics form a hybrid culture.
Lauren Olamina continues building Earthseed as a theocratic American government called 'Christian America' rises to power under a president who promises to 'Make America Great Again.' A deeply disturbing sequel.
Tan-Tan escapes her abusive father to a parallel world, where she becomes the mythic outlaw figure the Midnight Robber, drawn from Caribbean Carnival tradition. Written in Afro-Caribbean creole.
Aliens make first contact not in Washington D.C. but in Lagos. A marine biologist, a soldier, and a hip-hop star are the first to encounter them. Lagos — its chaos, its life force — is the real protagonist.
A landmark collection of African American folktales — animal stories, supernatural tales, and the title story of enslaved Africans who remember how to fly and escape their bondage.
Twelve Native American characters converge on the Big Oakland Powwow with different intentions — some to perform, some to rob it. A polyphonic novel about urban Native American identity.
Linked stories following three sisters in Uganda — their adolescence, their encounters with HIV/AIDS, their searches for love and meaning. One of the finest debuts in East African fiction.
In a Haitian village in 1938, a French woman is turned into a zombie on her wedding day and escapes through magic. A delirious mix of Vodou, eroticism, and Carnival set in the backdrop of American occupation.
An examination of how Muslim youth in the diaspora — from Harlem to Paris to Dakar — use hip-hop, gnawa, and protest music to forge a global identity that connects Islamic and Black Atlantic traditions.
A comprehensive collection of Palestinian Arab oral folk tales, collected from women storytellers across Palestine, preserving a tradition under threat of erasure.
Noted for comparison: a novel of house arrest and elegant confinement — interesting as contrast to how African writers depict confinement and surveillance without access to the elegance Towles describes.
When Baba Segi takes a fourth wife, an educated woman who upsets the household's balance, the secrets of all the wives are put at risk. A sharp, funny, feminist novel about polygamy in contemporary Nigeria.
Narrated by a man's chi (personal spirit), the novel follows Chinonso's journey from Nigeria to Cyprus on a doomed quest for love, inspired by the Igbo epic Odunke. A maximalist mythic novel.
Twelve short stories blending the fantastical and the real, spanning Nigeria, diaspora, and invented futures — women who knit grief out of the bereaved, scientists who calculate human emotion, mothers and daughters across generations.
Korede is always cleaning up after her beautiful sister Ayoola, who keeps killing her boyfriends. A darkly comic thriller about sisterhood, beauty, and complicity set in contemporary Lagos.
Ada is an ogbanje — a spirit child in Igbo cosmology — and her multiplicity of selves inhabit her body and narrate her life. A devastating examination of identity, trauma, and Nigerian spiritual belief.
Duniya, a nurse and single mother in Mogadishu, receives a mysterious gift and ponders what it means to give and receive. Set just before Somalia's collapse, it is a quiet meditation on dignity and dependency.
Fat Charlie Nancy discovers his father was Anansi, the West African spider-trickster god. His long-lost brother arrives with godlike abilities and turns his life upside down. A joyful exploration of West African mythology.
Kingsley, a top engineering graduate who can't find work, is pulled into his flamboyant uncle's 419 advance-fee fraud empire. A darkly comic examination of corruption, ambition, and the pressures on African families.
Twelve stories about Nigerians in Nigeria and America — an immigrant woman in Connecticut, a newlywed encountering her husband's family secrets, a woman searching for her coup-arrested father.
Maathai's memoir of founding the Green Belt Movement — which planted over 50 million trees across Africa — her years of persecution under Moi, imprisonment, and the Nobel Peace Prize she received in 2004.
Vikram Lall, an Asian Kenyan, narrates his family's history through Kenya's independence and its descent into corruption, placed between Black, white, and Asian communities — belonging fully to none.
A gunny sack of family memories anchors Salim's journey through the history of Tanzania's Asian community — from the slave trade era through independence. Vassanji's debut novel.
Collected essays and speeches of the Black Consciousness Movement — Biko, Barney Pityana, Mamphela Ramphele — compiled to make the movement's foundational texts accessible.
The UK title of Country of My Skull — Krog's account of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Published under different titles in different markets.
Collected speeches of Thomas Sankara, who renamed Upper Volta as Burkina Faso and led an extraordinary revolutionary government from 1983-1987. On women's liberation, imperialism, debt, and African dignity.
Three plays by Caryl Phillips exploring Black British experience — Strange Fruit (a family's conflict over racial identity), Where There is Darkness, and The Shelter.
An African father who sold his children into slavery 250 years ago watches their descendants scatter across the Black Atlantic — a missionary in Africa, a slave in America, a GI's wartime companion in England.
A debut poetry collection by a Ghanaian-American poet exploring inherited trauma, Blackness in America, and the body as site of racial and gendered violence.
Sammar, a Sudanese woman working as a translator in Aberdeen after the death of her husband, falls in love with a Scottish academic studying Islamic politics. A quiet, luminous novel about faith and belonging.
Najwa, a Sudanese woman in London who has lost everything — her wealth, her family, her education — finds herself through working as a maid and through Islamic practice.
Ngũgĩ's argument that the dismemberment of Africa — cultural, linguistic, psychological — requires a counter-practice of 're-membering' through African languages and pan-Africanism.
Two Americans try to give away $32,000 cash to strangers around the world in a week following a friend's death. Though by an American author, this novel portrays African countries with unusual honesty about Western projection.
A Ugandan family is torn apart by political violence, forced displacement, and the AIDS crisis. One of the earliest Ugandan novels by a woman to address the intersection of war and women's bodies.
A novel about a Ugandan woman who builds a community center as a center of resistance and solidarity, connecting generations of women across Uganda's turbulent history.
A Ghanaian-American family navigates the first generation's dreams against the second generation's realities — identity, assimilation, and return.
A Syrian narrator tells their dying partner stories from their shared queer life in Damascus and as refugees in Canada — love, war, displacement, and memory. Included as a North African/Middle East queer diaspora text.
Morrison's landmark essays examining how Black presence shaped the white American literary imagination — how canonical American authors like Poe, Cather, and Hemingway wrote about and around Blackness.
Morrison's final Harvard Norton Lectures, examining how literature constructs the 'Other' — how we narrativize race, how foreignness is produced, and how literature can counter othering.
A Brazilian journalist searching for a missing woman in Angola discovers connections between Angola's civil war, Brazilian slavery, and a mysterious manuscript. Agualusa's most internationally acclaimed work.
Included as a comparison text — on an island, objects disappear and the memory of them fades. A profound meditation on forgetting, colonization, and cultural erasure relevant to African memory studies.
Short stories from Zimbabwe, unflinching in their examination of grief, violence, and survival in a country that has endured relentless crisis. Tshuma's debut collection.
Zamani, a lodger, insinuates himself into a Zimbabwean family devastated by the disappearance of their son during Mugabe's Gukurahundi massacres. An unreliable narrator's dark, funny, disturbing novel.
Set in Croatia after the Balkan wars — though by a Sierra Leonean author, the novel's examination of memory, silence, and war's aftermath directly draws on Forna's experience of Sierra Leone's civil war.
A British psychologist arrives in post-war Sierra Leone and becomes entangled with a Sierra Leonean doctor and a dying professor whose memories span the country's descent into civil war.
Agu, a child soldier in an unnamed West African country, narrates his participation in atrocities in a fractured English that mirrors his fractured psyche. Based loosely on West Africa's civil wars.