Interiority

The quality of being focused on one's inner life and identity.
Interiority

Broadcaster, Azania Mosaka, hosts a series of conversations with Africans about their inner world. Interiority conversations centre on their blackness, perspectives, thoughts, lived experiences, reflections and worldview. This is an exploration of within the making, the wonder, the magic.

  1. For whom does this rainbow shine - Nolwazi Tusini's Ruth First Lecture

    06/08/2020

    For whom does this rainbow shine - Nolwazi Tusini's Ruth First Lecture

    In 1991 the South African schooling system desegregated and historically white schools opened up and accepted children of all races. The first black students in these schools seemed to live up to their place in history. They populated the school awards ceremonies, became prefects and notice boards with black, African names featured for the first time. This was seen as a victory. In 2015, the generation of students who followed the 80s cohort into previously white schools led a nation-wide protest movement which would become known as #FeesMustFall. For this 90s cohort who entered universities, the reality of an untransformed society hit. They called for free education, increased funding to universities, the removal of colonial and apartheid statues, and the decolonization of education. If that was the fight of the 90s cohort, where does that leave the “victory” of the previous generation, the 80s cohort which was the first to enter previously white schools? What did it mean to be a black body, a guinea pigs in the desegregation of the South African schooling system? Award-winning news and current affairs editor, journalist, gender rights activist, speaker, and social commentator, Nolwazi Tusini delivers an edited version of her Ruth First Lecture titled The 80s kids: A story of collaboration as disruption. The lecture is based on her research on the first generation of black children to enter desegregated multi-racial schools in South Africa.

    25 min

About

Broadcaster, Azania Mosaka, hosts a series of conversations with Africans about their inner world. Interiority conversations centre on their blackness, perspectives, thoughts, lived experiences, reflections and worldview. This is an exploration of within the making, the wonder, the magic.

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