Dress can have a strange and sudden effect on people. When Orlando Pirates fan Kenneth Metiba is in his formal gear he looks just like a regular guy.
Do a country’s democratic credentials influence its World Cup prospects?
There is a contrived air of political correctness in Ngugi wa Thiong’o’s memoir <i>Dreams in a Time of War</i>, writes <b>Percy Zvomuya</b>
<b>Percy Zvomuya</b> speaks to the pre-eminent sculptor about his upcoming show and his ecological approach to creation.
<strong>Percy Zvomuya</strong> reviews the latest reggae releases that will have you skanking.
Yusuf Afari explains to <strong>Percy Zvomuya</strong> and <strong>Karabo Keepile</strong> how he uses poetry "as a surgeon would use his knife".
Johannesburg celebrates the World Cup moment with a showcase of its boldest and most productive artists.
But the laudable project is fraught with the contradictions that haunt struggle histories, writes <b>Percy Zvomuya</b>.
Somalia-born K’naan offers the hip-hop scene something other than violence and terror, writes Percy Zvomuya.
Kopano Matlwa’s second novel is an ambitious allegorical exploration of what rainbow nationhood has meant for South Africa.