This article explores how women writers in Nigeria and Tanzania use digital media, drawing parallels between infrastructural enablement and literary worldmaking. It argues that female African writers offer insights into the embodied practices and cultural imaginaries of digitally mediated creativity, which can shed light on the paradoxical entanglements of infrastructure
As Digital Humanities continue to attract global discussion and re-definition in terms of technologi...
In this article, I bring five recent, substantial novels by Eastern African women writers together f...
This essay will link African women’s writing to culture, including literary culture and the politics...
This article explores how women writers in Nigeria and Tanzania use digital media, drawing parallels...
The 21st century convergence of media through technological, industry and market conflations has alt...
Cathrine Phiri's novel ‘Never Mine’ on Facebook, highlights the liberating potential of online liter...
In the age of digital media, creators are using the versatile nature of information and communicatio...
This article has been published by the Cambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry.Digital it...
This article looks at the Women Writing Africa project as both a response to prevailing assumptions ...
This introductory essay argues for a decolonial approach that privileges qualitative methods in ways...
From the relative absence of serious women writing in the early mainstream East African literature i...
This chapter probes the multilayered location and multidirectional orientation of a female performan...
This article explores the space between politics and literature occupied by feminist writers in Fran...
Co-published with Zed BooksFrench version available in IDRC Digital Library: Africaines et les TIC :...
The book examines the creative industries of Cameroon and Africa and makes bold the cultural triumph...
As Digital Humanities continue to attract global discussion and re-definition in terms of technologi...
In this article, I bring five recent, substantial novels by Eastern African women writers together f...
This essay will link African women’s writing to culture, including literary culture and the politics...
This article explores how women writers in Nigeria and Tanzania use digital media, drawing parallels...
The 21st century convergence of media through technological, industry and market conflations has alt...
Cathrine Phiri's novel ‘Never Mine’ on Facebook, highlights the liberating potential of online liter...
In the age of digital media, creators are using the versatile nature of information and communicatio...
This article has been published by the Cambridge Journal of Postcolonial Literary Inquiry.Digital it...
This article looks at the Women Writing Africa project as both a response to prevailing assumptions ...
This introductory essay argues for a decolonial approach that privileges qualitative methods in ways...
From the relative absence of serious women writing in the early mainstream East African literature i...
This chapter probes the multilayered location and multidirectional orientation of a female performan...
This article explores the space between politics and literature occupied by feminist writers in Fran...
Co-published with Zed BooksFrench version available in IDRC Digital Library: Africaines et les TIC :...
The book examines the creative industries of Cameroon and Africa and makes bold the cultural triumph...
As Digital Humanities continue to attract global discussion and re-definition in terms of technologi...
In this article, I bring five recent, substantial novels by Eastern African women writers together f...
This essay will link African women’s writing to culture, including literary culture and the politics...