GUILLERMO THOMAS recommends an important, if dispiriting book about the neo-colonial culture of Uganda under Yoweri Museveni
THIS intriguingly entitled pamphlet by Richard Pithouse is part of the Thinking Freedom series produced by New Frame, a South African-based social justice media project committed to “accurate, careful and credible news.”
As a literary form, the pamphlet has a long and important history, serving the purpose of informing the public directly of current issues and often attacking Establishment ideologies in ways delivered today through social media and Pithouse charts the historical inter-relationship of Christianity, colonialism, capitalism and racism through the ongoing establishment of European hegemony over the world.
He uses the stepping stones of key moments deriving from the very same month in 1492 when Columbus set off on the great New World treasure hunt — with Papal carte blanche — the Jews were driven out of Spain and the emergence of a European ideological project was established.
BRENT CUTLER is intrigued by the imperialist, supremacist and contradictory history of a word that is used all too easily
GORDON PARSONS is enthralled by an erudite and entertaining account of where the language we speak came from
On the centenary of the birth of the anti-colonial thinker and activist Frantz Fanon, JENNY FARRELL assesses his enduring influence
TONY CONWAY assesses the lessons of the 1930s and looks at what is similar, and what is different, about the rise of the far right today



