CHIMURENGA LAUNCHES THE CHIMURENGA CHRONIC ON BLACK WEDNESDAY
Below is a press release from Chimurenga.
South Africa: Chimurenga’s new publishing project takes the form of a once-off, one-day-only edition of a fictional newspaper to be released on “Black Wednesday”, October 19th 2011 – a historic day in South Africa that marks the banning of numerous Black Consciousness organisations and independent newspapers by the apartheid regime.
The result is both a bold art project and a hugely ambitious publishing venture that gives voice to all aspects of life on the continent. The 96-page multi-section broadsheet features news, analysis and longform journalism by award-winning writers and journalists. Its content ranges from in-depth investigations into xenophobia, border politics, the business of migration and ethnic economics, to innovative coverage of sports, arts, health, technology and more.
Of course, as Edjabe notes, “it isn’t a Chimurenga project if there isn’t music.” With this in mind the Chronic also comes packaged with a free audio CD supplement in the form of a “mixtape” composed, arranged and performed by celebrated musician and composer Neo Muyanga.
South Africa: Chimurenga’s new publishing project takes the form of a once-off, one-day-only edition of a fictional newspaper to be released on “Black Wednesday”, October 19th 2011 – a historic day in South Africa that marks the banning of numerous Black Consciousness organisations and independent newspapers by the apartheid regime.
Titled the Chimurenga Chronic,
the project is an intervention into the newspaper as a vehicle of knowledge
production and dissemination. Editor Ntone Edjabe explains, “Knowledge produced
by Africans is always curtailed towards simplicity because we are trapped in
the logic of emergency. At Chimurenga
we’re constantly trying to create beyond this shut hole of relevance. There is
indeed famine and war but there is also life. There is also innovation,
thinking, dreams – all the things that make life. Our project is to articulate
this complexity.”
In order to do this, the Chimurenga
Chronic takes a step back. Locating itself directly inside the emergency,
the newspaper is backdated to the period of May 2008, a time marked by the
outbreak of xenophobic violence in South Africa.
“Our sense of history, of what is relevant, is marked by the
newspaper medium,” notes Edjabe. By embracing this form, the Chimurenga Chronic seeks to provide an
alternative to mainstream representations of history, on the one hand filling
the gap in the historical coverage of this event, whilst at the same time
reopening it.
“The objective is not to revisit the past to bring about closure,”
says Edjabe, “but rather to provoke and challenge our perception, in order to
imagine a new foundation from which we can think and act within our current
context.”
The
newspaper
The result is both a bold art project and a hugely ambitious publishing venture that gives voice to all aspects of life on the continent. The 96-page multi-section broadsheet features news, analysis and longform journalism by award-winning writers and journalists. Its content ranges from in-depth investigations into xenophobia, border politics, the business of migration and ethnic economics, to innovative coverage of sports, arts, health, technology and more.
The stand-alone 56 page Chronic Life
Magazine features photography, essays, guides, games, columns and more, and the
Chronic Book Review Magazine is a self-contained 96 page magazine packed with interviews,
analysis and over 92 pages of book reviews, as well as new fiction and poetry.
Of course, as Edjabe notes, “it isn’t a Chimurenga project if there isn’t music.” With this in mind the Chronic also comes packaged with a free audio CD supplement in the form of a “mixtape” composed, arranged and performed by celebrated musician and composer Neo Muyanga.
A Pan African Collaboration
In an effort to shift the perspective away
from the confines of nation-states, The Chimurenga
Chronic is a Pan African production, created in cooperation with
independent publishers Kwani? in Kenya and Nigeria ’s Cassava Republic Press.
It brings together journalists and editors, writers, theorists, photographers,
illustrators and artists from around Africa and the world to create a platform
for imagination and dialogue.
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