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561 works of pan-African thought. 56 matching current filters.
The first novel published in English by a writer from East Africa, depicting the effects of the Mau Mau uprising on ordinary Kenyans during the 1950s.
Set in the Gikuyu country of Kenya, the novel explores the tension between traditional customs and Christianity through the story of two villages separated by a river.
The story of Ebla, a young Somali woman who flees an arranged marriage, exploring women's rights and traditional practices in Somali society.
First novel in the Blood in the Sun trilogy, exploring identity and belonging through the story of Askar, an orphan raised by a woman during the Ogaden War.
Following a young man's murder, the novel explores Kenya's history, from the Mau Mau uprising to post-election violence, through multiple family perspectives.
A Kenyan woman travels to China after learning of her Chinese heritage, exploring themes of loss, discovery, and identity along the ancient trade routes.
Collection of essays outlining Tanzania's unique approach to African socialism based on traditional communal values and self-reliance.
Essays on the politics of language in African literature, arguing that African writers should write in African languages to decolonize their minds.
Ethnographic study of the Gikuyu people written by Kenya's future first president, defending traditional African social structures against colonial disruption.
Historical novel about Ethiopian women who fought against Mussolini's 1935 invasion, following Hirut who rises from servant to soldier.
Memoir of the first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize, chronicling her founding of the Green Belt Movement and fight for democracy in Kenya.
Memoir of the author's Tutsi family's persecution leading up to the 1994 genocide, when 37 of her family members were killed.
Epic multigenerational saga spanning 250 years of Ugandan history, following the descendants of Kintu Kidda who is cursed after accidentally killing the king's son.
Long poem in which Lawino, a rural Acholi woman, laments her husband's rejection of traditional ways for Western culture, defending African identity.
Declaration outlining Tanzania's policy of socialism and self-reliance (Ujamaa), nationalizing major industries and emphasizing rural development.
Young Yusuf is sold into bondage to pay his father's debt in early 20th century East Africa, exploring pre-colonial trade routes.
Two Zanzibari men meet as refugees in England, unraveling decades of connected history and betrayal.
Set in German-controlled East Africa, following characters through colonialism, WWI, and its aftermath.
Love story spanning generations in early 20th century Zanzibar, exploring colonial relationships and their legacy.
Collection of speeches and writings on African socialism and Tanzanian independence.
Essays developing Ujamaa as African socialism rooted in traditional communal values.
UN peacekeepers are exploding in a small Mozambican town. An Italian inspector and local translator investigate a mystery blurring the natural and supernatural, satirizing foreign intervention in post-war Africa.
The ghost of a 100-year-old man investigates a murder inside a colonial fortress repurposed as a nursing home in post-independence Mozambique, a haunting meditation on memory, justice, and the inescapable presence of history.
Rami discovers her husband has four other wives and brings them all together, forging an unexpected sisterhood. A comic, sensual, and deeply political novel about marriage, female solidarity, and what women owe themselves.
Rosa, a convent-educated Tanzanian woman, struggles between the Catholic faith of her mission schooling and the pull of her desires and community. Kezilahabi's debut broke taboos in Swahili literature with frank portrayals of sexuality and existential doubt.
An experimental, philosophically dense novel influenced by Kierkegaard and existentialism, following a narrator's surreal quest through dreams, riddles, and metamorphosis, pushing Swahili prose into postmodern territory.
A satirical utopian fable set in the imaginary kingdom of Kusadikika, where a council debates whether to allow citizens to study abroad, a prescient allegory about colonialism, education, and African self-determination.
A historical play about Kinjeketile Ngwale, the spirit medium who led the Maji Maji uprising against German colonial rule in Tanzania (1905-07), blending oral forms with modern drama to examine resistance, leadership, and sacrifice.
A Luo family migrates from Kenya to Tanzania in search of a better life, but the husband's obsession with wealth leads into a terrifying encounter with a supernatural curse, a collision of ambition, tradition, and the unknown.
A short story collection drawing on Luo oral tradition, folklore, and the tensions of modern Kenya, death, spirits, marriage, and the fragile balance between old and new ways of life in East Africa.
The companion poem to Song of Lawino, giving voice to Ocol, the Westernized husband. His contemptuous monologue dismissing Africa as backward becomes an unwitting self-indictment, exposing the psychological damage of colonial education.
Three directors of a Nairobi brewery are murdered. Four suspects recall their interconnected histories in neo-colonial Kenya, building a Marxist indictment of the African elite who inherited colonial exploitation.
A freedom fighter who buried his weapons after independence emerges from the forest to find Kenya's post-independence society as unjust as colonialism. The Kenyan government issued a warrant for Matigari's arrest, not realizing he was fictional.
Set in the days before Kenyan independence, several villagers prepare for Uhuru Day celebrations while haunted by their choices during the Mau Mau uprising. Ngũgĩ's most technically accomplished novel.
Written in secret on toilet paper while Ngũgĩ was imprisoned without trial, and originally published in Gikuyu as Caitaani Mutharaba-Ini. A satirical allegory about neo-colonial Kenya where thieves and robbers hold a competition.
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.
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.
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.
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.
p'Bitek's collection of Acholi oral poetry — love songs, war songs, hunting songs, and funeral dirges — translated into English while preserving the rhythmic energy of the original.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Nyerere's articulation of Ujamaa — African socialism based on the communal values of traditional African society. He argues capitalism and Marxism are both foreign ideologies inadequate for Africa.
Ngũgĩ's early essays on African literature, the crisis of African identity, and the role of the writer in a post-colonial society. His first major critical work.
Essays on the political role of African writers, the relationship between literature and national liberation, and Ngũgĩ's increasing commitment to writing in African languages.
Ngũgĩ's argument that the dismemberment of Africa — cultural, linguistic, psychological — requires a counter-practice of 're-membering' through African languages and pan-Africanism.
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.