18 episodes

African creatives are finding their voice and asserting their agency through this digital, connected, and virtual world. Their work and expressions are reaching across all divides as they interrogate the past and re-imagine what it means to be an African today.

Join me, Njeri Wangari, a writer, author, editor, speaker and digital storyteller as I engage my fellow creatives, thinkers, makers, and builders for candid conversations on how they are weaving their own thread in this awakened Africa. This is an exploration of the intersection between technology, arts, culture & heritage.

Kenyan Poet's Podcast Njeri Wangari

    • Arts

African creatives are finding their voice and asserting their agency through this digital, connected, and virtual world. Their work and expressions are reaching across all divides as they interrogate the past and re-imagine what it means to be an African today.

Join me, Njeri Wangari, a writer, author, editor, speaker and digital storyteller as I engage my fellow creatives, thinkers, makers, and builders for candid conversations on how they are weaving their own thread in this awakened Africa. This is an exploration of the intersection between technology, arts, culture & heritage.

    Ep 19: Soma Nami Books founders Muthoni and Wendy are redefining how and who we read in African Literature

    Ep 19: Soma Nami Books founders Muthoni and Wendy are redefining how and who we read in African Literature

    In our season's Finale, Njeri is joined by two amazing women; Muthoni Muiruri and Wendy Njoroge who embody the new face of growing online and offline spaces for contemporary African literature. They are the founders of the Soma Nami bookstore- a book hub and Nairobi's trendiest space that prides itself on having the widest variety of books by African authors.

    Njeri visited the Soma Nami bookstore to film this episode on location as she spoke to Muthoni and Wendy on how the hub has become the go-to space for literary enthusiasts hungry to find and read stories that speak to their own experiences as Africans.

    Wendy & Muthoni begin by speaking on their transition having begun as a book club, to running an online bookshop, to launching a physical bookstore this year in spite of a pandemic. The duo shares how they fell in love with reading and why having such spaces dedicated to African Literature is so important.

    They also speak on the growing Kenyan reading community, why we are seeing such proliferation of writers not just from Africa, but also from Kenya and the diversity in the stories being written. How do they keep the reading community growing and vibrant?

    Finally, Njeri, Wendy & Muthoni discuss the recently announced Nobel Prize for Literature and what this means to us and the genre

    Follow Njeri Wangari everywhere @Kenyanpoet- Instagram, Facebook, Twitter.

    Check out her poetry collection Mines & Mindfields; My spoken words.

    Have thoughts, feedback or questions about the episode, email njeriwangari@kenyanpoet.com

    The making of this Episode was proudly supported by EUNIC Kenya

    • 27 min
    Ep 18: Olivia Ambani is doing better than just fine as a Singer, Songwriter & Marketer

    Ep 18: Olivia Ambani is doing better than just fine as a Singer, Songwriter & Marketer

    Olivia Ambani is a singer, songwriter and marketer whose song Falling Star from her debut album THE AWAKENING was featured in a movie “Just In Time” currently showing on NETFLIX.  How did that happen within months of releasing her album last year? Her recount of this sounds almost fictional.

    In this episode, Olivia and Njeri begin the conversation with her experience finishing her album last year. how she stopped waiting for someone to come along and discover her, writing from a place of deep vulnerabilities, making her dreams come true and how the album's release has opened up great opportunities for her.

    Njeri and Olivia share their own experiences on how things just align but the role that creatives have to play in preparing for that moment and putting themselves out there. How does she manage to juggle marketing with singing and songwriting and how do they feed off each other.

    Olivia's story of how she bootstrapped for her Awakening album production and release is full of knowledge bombs; educating herself on copyright, the music business and being intentional about owning every aspect of her music.

    The final part of their convo dwells on the new Alternative/underground Kenyan sound and the different ways that artists and musicians are making money beyond the conventional music business and marketing models.

    The making of this Episode was proudly supported by EUNIC Kenya

    Follow Njeri Wangari everywhere @Kenyanpoet- Instagram, Facebook, Twitter.

    Check out her poetry collection Mines & Mindfields; My spoken words on Amazon or wherever books are sold

    Have thoughts, feedback or questions about this episode, email njeriwangari@kenyanpoet.com

    Watch/listen to this episode https://linktr.ee/KenyanPoet

    • 36 min
    Ep 17: The Diary of a Crate Digger & Vinyl Hip Hop DJ on Kenya's Vinyl community with Sam the Digga

    Ep 17: The Diary of a Crate Digger & Vinyl Hip Hop DJ on Kenya's Vinyl community with Sam the Digga

    Sam the Digga (Sam Ombasa ) lives to play, collect, listen to and share records. 

    He is perhaps one of Kenya’s most underrated Vinyl DJs whose passion to keep the art of playing a record on a turntable in the club alive has made him a truly inspiring remnant.  

    In this episode, Sam and Njeri begin the convo on growing up and their early musical influences. Both children of the '80s, cassettes were the in-were the in-thing during their formative years, so what sparked their love for vinyl records?

     Njeri starts off the poem Hip-Hop from her first poetry collection Mines & Mind Fields; My Spoken Words (available on Amazon), this prompt both to speak on the genesis of their love for Hip-Hop and the process of how they both express it. Who are their favourite rappers? They share as they give their take on the evergreen debate on Tupac vs Biggie.

    Crate digging is an art that one acquires and which is often informed by a love for music in general or specific genres. Sam shares some tips as he and Njeri speak on some of their collections, how, where and why they collect vinyl.  Sam speaks of Kenya's Vinyl community, working with James Rugami - Kenya's premier vinyl dealer, and finding new ways of thriving as a DJ amidst a pandemic with curfews & close of entertainment spots.  

    Follow him on Twitter @samuelombasa

    Find his dope Hip Hop mixes here https://www.mixcloud.com/samthadigga/

    This episode is proudly supported by EUNIC Kenya

    Follow Njeri Wangari everywhere @Kenyanpoet- Instagram, Facebook, Twitter.

    Check out her poetry collection Mines & Mindfields; My spoken words on Amazon or wherever books are sold

    Have thoughts, feedback or questions about this episode, email njeriwangari@kenyanpoet.com

    Watch/listen to this episode https://linktr.ee/KenyanPoet

    • 52 min
    Ep 16: The makings of an award-winning film production designer, challenging gender stereotypes (With Sunshyn Siteiya)

    Ep 16: The makings of an award-winning film production designer, challenging gender stereotypes (With Sunshyn Siteiya)

    Siteiya Warui popularly known online as Sunshyn Siteiya is a polymath. She is an award-winning film production designer,  art director, creative designer and props master. In other words,  she is a creative fundi with a wild imagination. She sees colours vividly, knows how to play with them, how to build concepts for different sets. Perhaps the most endearing thing about her is that she is unafraid to get her hands dirty be it climbing ladders haggling at a hardware or plastering a wall.

    In this episode, we begin with a poetry reading - The Twist by Edward Kamau Brathwaite from A poetry Course for KCSE book.

    Siteiya tells Njeri of the pure coincidence that led her on a path to becoming a production designer.  The convo then moves to her becoming a creative polymath (Award-Winning Film Production) Designer, Freelance Art Director Creative Designer and Props Master), her work on 40 Sticks on Netflix and the experience of winning the Best Production designer Kalasha Awards in 2020. Working with Osborne Macharia for the set of Lwanda Rockman.

    Siteiya opens up about her struggles working in a male-dominated industry, challenging conventional wisdom about women in set designs (  that Kazi ya mjengo si ya wanawake) & dealing with stereotypes on & off the job.

    Finally, Njeri and Siteiya speak on how her love for transforming small spaces keeps her going despite being labelled too expensive after winning awards.  She also shares different projects she has been doing and her efforts in mentoring young women.

    Follow Siteiya's work: https://siteiya.co.ke/

    Watch/listen to this episode https://linktr.ee/KenyanPoet

    Follow Njeri Wangari everywhere @Kenyanpoet- Instagram, Facebook, Twitter.

    Find/buy my poetry collection Mines & Mindfields; My spoken words.

    Have thoughts, feedback or questions about the episode, email njeriwangari@kenyanpoet.com

    The making of this Episode was proudly supported by EUNIC Kenya

    • 33 min
    Ep 15: Multilingualism, publishing & how language is determining participation in emerging knowledge societies (With Munyao Kilolo)

    Ep 15: Multilingualism, publishing & how language is determining participation in emerging knowledge societies (With Munyao Kilolo)

    Munyao Kilolo is a writer, editor, Journalist, African Language literature enthusiast and founding member of Jalada Africa.

    In this episode,  Kilolo is telling Njeri about why he is such a staunch advocate and vocal proponent for African languages. Why he believes in the power of language, not just as a primary vector for communicating information but also as the means to knowledge and as a carrier of culture.

    Njeri and Kilolo discuss the Internet  & how language is determining participation in emerging knowledge societies, and how Kiswahili seems to be taking the same status that has for centuries been taken by English & French.  Kilolo speaks on why embracing translation and publishing in African languages is the only way to ensure usage and survival even as they discuss multilingualism in storytelling and in publishing.

    Kilolo is also telling Njeri about founding Jalada & its groundbreaking emphasis on translation in African languages in its 2015 Language Issue, Ituĩka Rĩa Mũrũngarũ: Kana Kĩrĩa Gĩtũmaga Andũ Mathiĩ Marũngiĩ or why Humans walk upright by Prof. Ngugi. and how it has so far been translated into 100 languages

    Njeri & Kilolo finalize by speaking on harmful stereotypes about African Languages & their appeal to younger generations and his latest initiative; a Kenyan writing and translation workshop happening later in the year

    • 45 min
    Ep 14: The Perilous Journey to Beyond My Nose (With Michael Onsando)

    Ep 14: The Perilous Journey to Beyond My Nose (With Michael Onsando)

    Michael Onsando is an essayist, poet and author of 3 poetry collections. His latest book just came out in July and it is something quite unlike anything you have read.

    In this episode, Njeri- excited to be reading a copy of Michael's latest book, invites him for a conversation about what it took to write and publish his latest book- The perilous journey to beyond my nose. Michael speaks on why we should judge this particular title by its cover, what the process was like writing, picking the title, the art cover and how the Down River Road imprint became part of his perilous journey.

    If the last time you saw a poem was during KCSE, if the only thing you read is newspapers, if you can recite several poems on demand, then this is the book for you, he explains.

    Njeri asks him how different it was writing this third book from writing the first and the 2nd and what has been the growth in the journey of a reader who writes? Michael and Njeri discuss their individual growth and experiences writing and getting published. They also discuss which poets/writers they are currently reading and how they have been able to use their poetry as a stepping stone into the corporate world.

    Njeri reads one of Michael's poems as they have a conversation about the role of poetry in helping us make sense of life as it unfolds around us.

    Buy Michael's here https://downriverroad.org/shop/

    More information on Michael & his work:  https://michael.co.ke/, find and engage him on Twitter.

    Watch the video here https://youtu.be/zg6ZePcVHgE

    Follow Njeri everywhere @Kenyanpoet- Instagram, Facebook, Twitter. Check out her poetry collection Mines & Mindfields; My spoken words.

    Have thoughts, feedback or questions about the episode, email njeriwangari@kenyanpoet.com
    #EUNICKenya 

    • 36 min

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